- Author: Jonathan Safran Foer
- Publisher: Mariner Books / Houghton Mifflin Company
- Published: April 2006
- ISBN-10: 0618711651
- ISBN-13: 9780618711659
- Format: Paperback
- Copyright: 2005
- Subject: FICTION-GENERAL
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
By Jonathan Safran Foer
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Product Description
Author of the acclaimed debut novel, 'Everything Is Illuminated' - winner of the National Jewish Book Award, among others - strikes again with this 'uplifting myth born of the sorrows of 9/11.' Nine-year-old Oskar Schell embarks on an urgent, secret mission that will take him through the five boroughs of New York City, with the goal of finding the lock that matches a mysterious key that belonged to his father, who died in the World Trade Center the morning of September 11, 2001. This seemingly impossible task will bring Oskar into contact with survivors of all walks of life. 326p.
Editorial Reviews
The search for the lock that fits a mysterious key dovetails with related and parallel quests in this (literally) beautifully designed second from the gifted young author (Everything Is Illuminated, 2002).The searcher is nine-year-old Oskar Schell, an inventive prodigy who (albeit modeled on the protagonist of Grass's The Tin Drum) employs his considerable intellect with refreshing originality in the aftermath of his father Thomas's death following the bombing of the World Trade Center. That key, unidentified except for the word "black" on the envelope containing it, impels Oskar to seek out every New Yorker bearing the surname Black, involving him with a reclusive centenarian former war correspondent, and eventually the nameless elderly recluse who rents a room in his paternal grandma's nearby apartment. Meanwhile, unmailed letters from a likewise unidentified "Thomas" reveal their author's loneliness and guilt, while stretching backward to wartime Germany and a horrific precursor of the 9/11 atrocity: the firebombing of Dresden. In a riveting narrative animated both by Oskar's ingenuous assumption of adult responsibility and understanding (interestingly, he's "playing Yorick" in a school production of Hamlet) and the letter-writer's meaningful silences, Foer sprinkles his tricky text with interpolated illustrations that render both objects of Oskar's many interests and the word and memories of a survivor who has forsworn speech, determined to avoid the pain of loving too deeply. The story climaxes as Oskar discovers what the key fits, and also the meaning of his life (all our lives, actually), in a long-awaited letter from astrophysicist Stephen Hawking.Much more is revealed as this brilliant fiction works thrilling variations on, and consolations for, its plangent message: that "in the end, everyone loses everyone." Yes, but look what Foer has found.Film rights to Scott Rudin in conjunction with Warner Bros. and Paramount; author tour. Copyright Kirkus 2005 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
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