A Visit from the Goon Squad
Jennifer Egan’s spellbinding interlocking narratives circle the lives of Bennie Salazar, an aging former punk rocker and record executive, and
Sasha, the passionate, troubled young woman he employs. Although Bennie
and Sasha never discover each other’s pasts, the reader does, in
intimate detail, along with the secret lives of a host of other
characters whose paths intersect with theirs, over many years, in
locales as varied as New York, San Francisco, Naples, and Africa.
We first meet Sasha in her mid-thirties, on her therapist’s couch in New
York City, confronting her long-standing compulsion to steal. Later, we
learn the genesis of her turmoil when we see her as the child of a
violent marriage, then as a runaway living in Naples, then as a college
student trying to avert the suicidal impulses of her best friend. We
plunge into the hidden yearnings and disappointments of her uncle, an
art historian stuck in a dead marriage, who travels to Naples to extract Sasha from the city’s demimonde and experiences an epiphany of his own
while staring at a sculpture of Orpheus and Eurydice in the Museo
Nazionale. We meet Bennie Salazar at the melancholy nadir of his adult
life — divorced, struggling to connect with his nine-year-old son,
listening to a washed-up band in the basement of a suburban house — and
then revisit him in 1979, at the height of his youth, shy and tender,
reveling in San Francisco’s punk scene as he discovers his ardor for
rock and roll and his gift for spotting talent. We learn what became of
his high school gang — who thrived and who faltered — and we encounter Lou
Kline, Bennie’s catastrophically careless mentor, along with the lovers
and children left behind in the wake of Lou’s far-flung sexual conquests and meteoric rise and fall.
A Visit from the Goon Squad is a book about the interplay of time and music, about survival, about
the stirrings and transformations set inexorably in motion by even the
most passing conjunction of our fates. In a breathtaking array of styles and tones ranging from tragedy to satire to PowerPoint, Egan captures
the undertow of self-destruction that we all must either master or
succumb to; the basic human hunger for redemption; and the universal
tendency to reach for both—and escape the merciless progress of time — in
the transporting realms of art and music. Sly, startling, exhilarating
work from one of our boldest writers.
Jennifer Egan
Jennifer Egan (born 1962) is an American novelist and short story writer who lives in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. Egan's novel A Visit From the Goon Squad won the 2011 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and National Book Critics Circle Award for fiction.