yeah i prefer it, he knows what to avoid re: made-up pop culture and "not getting it" is also part of the joke.
― hardcore oatmeal (Jordan), Monday, 26 September 2011 17:19 (fourteen years ago)
i liked the the final few chapters a lot structurally, particularly the idea she has about how new scientific knowledge can be transmuted into the basis for shifts in 'cultural metaphors', that these kind of esoteric advances can easily become new prisms through which the world is understood/ordered. i guess in part i liked that she illuminated the whole of the novel that way, the conversation abt modes of thinking as metaphor for 'the novel' &c &c
its funny (i guess?) i was arguing in favor of this book vs. 'super sad...' w/ a bowtied 'literary figure' at a party recently by saying that even if her vision of technology/music was dopey the tone seemed right to me, it was less hectoring and 'you'll get yours' and so felt more honest and possible? idk
― this display name must in some way reference laurel halo (Lamp), Monday, 26 September 2011 17:20 (fourteen years ago)
I just finished Look at me and really liked it.
― What does one wear to a summery execution? Linen? (Michael White), Monday, 26 September 2011 17:20 (fourteen years ago)
:D that's my favorite one!
― horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 17:21 (fourteen years ago)
to return to the original post, no one i know has ever discussed this stuff at parties, even when i was in grad school. fwiw.
― horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 17:22 (fourteen years ago)
lol wrong thread
― horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 17:23 (fourteen years ago)
Ha that sounded like an xp to lamp!
I love all her stuff, too, but would rep for the keep as being her most 'successful' novel
― just1n3, Monday, 26 September 2011 17:42 (fourteen years ago)
i think 'the keep' breaks down worse than this one tbh but its a lot more fun
― this display name must in some way reference laurel halo (Lamp), Monday, 26 September 2011 17:48 (fourteen years ago)
i still need to read that
xp
― hardcore oatmeal (Jordan), Monday, 26 September 2011 17:48 (fourteen years ago)
very last part of good squad was very much in the "why non-sf writers shouldn't do future projection" mold. (most of them shouldn't do it, either, tbh.) otoh i can't name too many sf books that punched me in the gut as hard as the best parts of this book.
― strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 18:05 (fourteen years ago)
very last part of good squad was very much in the "why non-sf writers shouldn't do future projection" mold
or MFAs.
― Anakin Ska Walker (AKA Skarth Vader) (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 26 September 2011 18:06 (fourteen years ago)
i dont think egan is an mfa, actually
― max, Monday, 26 September 2011 18:08 (fourteen years ago)
can we just say she is?
― Anakin Ska Walker (AKA Skarth Vader) (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 26 September 2011 18:09 (fourteen years ago)
motherfuckin' author
― congratulations (n/a), Monday, 26 September 2011 18:09 (fourteen years ago)
haha
― Anakin Ska Walker (AKA Skarth Vader) (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 26 September 2011 18:10 (fourteen years ago)
no, that would be lying
― Mr. Que, Monday, 26 September 2011 18:10 (fourteen years ago)
i think if we want to make up something about how all mfas are bad at the very least we should be talking about people who are actually mfas
― max, Monday, 26 September 2011 18:12 (fourteen years ago)
like i mentioned on the "what are you reading" thread that i recently plowed through the three william gibson '90s books and while he got a lot "wrong" and a lot of the rest was obviously blown out of proportion for satirical/narrative effect, his "now" feels a lot more like our actual now than i think egan's future is gonna actually look/feel like when we get there. but gibson's characters are mostly ciphers/plot-drivers, whereas i was actually relieved to see in good squad that rhea (despite a lot of obvious bumps) was doing okay as an adult. all of which just means i guess that i think egan's real gift is for character and sometimes that got away from her with all the hoop-jumping and special effects, though in the abstract i think she should be applauded for trying to bring that gift to all the metafictional hoohah.
― strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 18:12 (fourteen years ago)
all of which makes it sound like i enjoyed this book a lot less than i did, but i actually really, really enjoyed it.
― strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 18:13 (fourteen years ago)
i think egan's real gift is for character
definitely
― horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 18:13 (fourteen years ago)
i think why i was so dazzled by goon squad immediately after i read it, even though on reflection i like look at me and the keep more, is that it's virtuosic in its tour of characters and it seems like egan sympathizes with them all.
― horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 18:15 (fourteen years ago)
Lamp said something about this upthread i think; he was otm
i think the best part of the novel is how compassionate it is, & how much she seemed to want to give all her characters the benefit of the doubt, to do them justice. & that made me eager to spend time in their company, to know them & to empathize w/ them.
― Lamp, Sunday, May 8, 2011 5:29 AM (11 hours ago) Bookmark
I didn't enjoy it much but it was too vaporous to despise. My favorite section remains the one set in Italy; its tone is subtler than the rest of the novel.
― Anakin Ska Walker (AKA Skarth Vader) (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 26 September 2011 18:16 (fourteen years ago)
i'll kill u
― horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 18:17 (fourteen years ago)
lol
― strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 18:18 (fourteen years ago)
tbh i was kinda afraid of voicing any reservations about this book in front of horseshoe
haha i'm sorry! the days of the ilx book club on this book were hard for me but it was good experience to try to respond to pinefox's criticisms in my head. really welcome what all the smart people have to say about how they hate my beloved book.
― horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 18:20 (fourteen years ago)
hahaha never read this thread, pinefox is hilarious
― Mr. Que, Monday, 26 September 2011 18:22 (fourteen years ago)
pinefox on some definite anthropologist-from-mars steez in this thread
― thomp, Tuesday, May 3, 2011
"this thread"
j/k pinefox i luv u boo
― strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 18:26 (fourteen years ago)
I'd like to go to a party with horseshoe and change her experience - and mine - of what people talk about at parties.
I don't see what grounds Max has for saying Egan is a talented stylist. I think 'stylist' etc was already discussed in this long fractious thread. I think some of us think she seems stylistically pretty flat.
Max is very lucky to be 25 years younger than Egan. Let's hope he makes the most of that incredible boon! (I'm serious - there is nothing much more valuable than youth.)
I don't know Warlock but I can confirm that I have never finished THE WARLOCK OF FIRETOP MOUNTAIN.
― the pinefox, Monday, 26 September 2011 18:55 (fourteen years ago)
I'm actually only 23 years younger than Egan.
― max, Monday, 26 September 2011 19:05 (fourteen years ago)
Oh no !!!
― the pinefox, Monday, 26 September 2011 19:35 (fourteen years ago)
Now that REALLY shouldn't have posted twice.
hey horseshoe, have you listened to this?
http://www.kcrw.com/etc/programs/bw/bw061221jennifer_egan
<3 for "stephen king's salem's lot...a book that i love"
― strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:18 (fourteen years ago)
listening right now, thanks strongo! everything she's ever said about fiction is totally <3 ime
― horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:28 (fourteen years ago)
not fair for her to be so talented and so pretty btw
― horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:29 (fourteen years ago)
when i went to look up her age i figured she was gonna be like 30something, not 50
― max, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:30 (fourteen years ago)
she lives near me btw
I don't like her as a writer
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 26 September 2011 22:33 (fourteen years ago)
never read anything she wrote though
i don't like YOU as a writer
― horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:34 (fourteen years ago)
that's untrue tbh
she's just one of those contemporary writers who has won a prize so I lump her in w/ people like franzen or zadie smith or whatever, whose work I'm familiar w/ and think will not last in any meaningful way, probably shouldn't though
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 26 September 2011 22:35 (fourteen years ago)
it's so weird that that happened btw...i guess she was on the fast track (i get the sense she's literarily *connected* maybe) but when i was first reading look at me it felt like this undiscovered gem that if any literary tastemakers ran across it they would probably dismiss as chicklit.
― horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:37 (fourteen years ago)
of course she was getting published in the new yorker so i was wrong, i guess
― horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:38 (fourteen years ago)
now that I am talking about books on a thread big ups to aero for recc'ing the rodoreda
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 26 September 2011 22:39 (fourteen years ago)
I am actually a really easy reader once I actually read something though and like p much everything so when I read this I probably won't hate her
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 26 September 2011 22:41 (fourteen years ago)
also, a lot of other good interviews on that show, hs, if yr not familiar. especially the robert stone ones.
― strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:50 (fourteen years ago)