A Visit from the Goon Squad
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Chapter 13: "Pure Language"
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I'm really disappointed that we didn't get to meet Sasha again, hear her voice or see her thoughts directly, before the end of the story. However, I thought the last few pages were beautiful - very moving and haunting, with the sense that the story, or the same sort of story, was beginning all over again. Both sad and hopeful. Many of the things I thought would be significant didn't turn out to be of any consequence at all, and in other ways there were coincidences I hadn't expected, such as Lulu becoming Bennie's assistant and Alex's re-encounter with Bennie having nothing directly to do with Sasha. Altogether, there was so much more that could have been written about all of the characters we've encountered - I'd love Egan to write more about some of them - but I knew the story couldn't go on forever and I was satisfied with how it was wrapped up.

After reading the chapter, I think I like Bennie less and Alex more. I suppose Bennie was believable as an aging producer. Alex was very dynamic in this chapter and I really liked his connection with his daughter.
The technology in this chapter was believable, I thought, albeit strange at first. I kind of liked the whole T thing and REALLY liked that the parents wanted to keep the technology away from their children.
It was a satisfying end to the book and, in the end, a great book overall.

With Egan, it feels almost effortless. Nearly every element of the future that is mentioned is relevant. She doesn't bring up changes to social media purely in an attempt to prognosticate how things are going, but because it is tied into Alex's work. "Pointers", if they are an admonishment of how quickly children are plugged in to technology, is done subtly and more as an examination of Alex's parenting methods.
Maybe this isn't the sort of thing I should be focusing on for this chapter, but I really liked how the time period was used more as a backdrop to define the characters and their actions rather than existing as some dire warning or ironic foretelling.


What a great end to a great book!

Also, the way security gets tightened more with every year (airports, schools, government buildings), I wouldn't be surprised by a "constant noise of choppers above" in a few years.
But "friend" and "real" becoming "word casings" - that's a bit scary...


Katya, I think the capital letters in the T language were meant to be long vowels/consonants, for example the word great was T'ed: grAt, so that you are supposed to say the letter 'A' when you read it (gr-A-t) Hope I explained that right :)


The book shows characters through time and space--past, present, future. That's the contents of our mind, how we really experience the story and the world.


Yes, indeed!

I enjoyed most of the chapter but didn't feel like it really wrapped things up well enough. Where there was resolution, it felt a little forced. Egan is stepping out into a very creative story-telling method by using all of these different mediums to put together a collage of a story, but in the end it doesn't feel like a complete novel to me. I partially fault myself for this as it was a difficult audio book to follow. Perhaps it comes across better in print.
I feel like Egan needed either a few less characters, or a few more chapters.


I really didn't like Egan's vision of the future, it seemed so bleak and impersonal. The "handsets" almost sounded like a government-issued device or something. But after contemplating it a few days, I think I was so upset by it because in the back of my mind, I could see things like parrots and choppers as plausible, perhaps inevitable. Which was depressing.
I really wanted Sasha to show up at the end, I wanted to hear her voice. But I thought it was poignant how Egan tied the reason for Sasha stealing Alex's piece of paper (her realization that she would become a vague memory to him) with Alex's compulsion to look up Bennie (because he had a vague memory of some girl-Sasha- talking about Bennie.) For some reason, when a relationship ends for me, I assume the other person forgets about me, even though I occasionally think of them. Those scenes made me wonder if the long-lost loves of my past might be driving past my old college apartment, wondering where I am now, hoping to catch a glimpse of me.
All in all, I wish Egan would have ended the book differently. I thought that making Lulu so T-savvy and not vocally conversational pushed my disbelief. On the other hand, sometimes, it is just easier to text, get the relevant information, and move on. Still, though, it seemed forced and not believable.
As a whole, I loved the book. Maybe if this chapter had come before the Powerpoint, I'd have been happier.

Young kids purchasing songs, rejuvenating the music industry, and songs being solely released to appeal to kids was crazy. But I suspect it was more to do with the theme of rebirth -- the rebirth of the music industry through the birth of a new generation. In that sense, it tied in nicely to the overall way Egan wrote about time itself.
The ending between Alex and Bennie was very sweet, though, and a nice way to end the novel.


I really liked the very ending with Bennie and Alex, and seeing the girl fiddling with her keys. Perfect.

I thought the book was a waste of time. I didn't benefit from it in any way. That being said-those are often the best books for a book club to read because if everyone likes a book, there is nothing to discuss.

The capital letters indicate a long vowel sound instead of a short vowel so you can shorten needs to nEds in this way.


Unfortunately, despite some clever and entertaining writing, I don't think this novel has anything profound to say.

This book was defiantly not what I expected but not a bad read either.

All in all I am glad I read this book- but for the most part I did not like it.
I hope our next book is a better read.


Although, and I did appreciate the complete circle.
I was wondering if anyone else realized Lulu's boyfriend was the son of the man Mindy (Lu's third wife) had a thing with in Africa? That made me giggle, and I loved bringing back Lulu all in all, it was nice to see her story completed.
My favorite part of this chapter was definitely Bennie and Scotty's talk in the trailer. "Life's a goon"



This chapter didn't feel that far into the future, tech wise. Maybe just a few years down the road. We already see kids and young adults that are more comfortable texting than talking in person. Lulu and Alex found that "exhausting" and reverted back to T'ing which made me laugh. Parroting - yep, it's being done now. Now, word casing confused me and I don't think I quite understand it.
As for Sasha showing up - I half expected it but glad that she didn't. She has a new life out in the desert away from all that fast living. It sounds like her kleptomania is cured and going back to NYC and being around the old gang could be bad for her. But I loved how Alex gradually remembered her and how he and Bennie went to her old apartment, hoping to see her. How did Alex know that she fingered his wallet? In ch 1, Sasha replaced his wallet, only missing that scrap of paper I BELIEVE IN YOU. Did he miss it? Well, not important.
Another thing I got a kick out of is how Alex and Rebecca are trying to protect Cara-Ann from getting "plugged in" with the handsets and all. But then Alex caved and Cara-Ann took to the handset like fish to water. Give her time and she can give her parents some pointers! Pun not intended but is cracking me up anyway :D


Although, and I did appreciate th..."
No, I'm pretty sure Lulu's boyfriend (husband at this point?) is the grandson of the warrior Charlie was admiring on safari in Chapter 4.


Ultimately though, I found it to be pretty satisfying. I wished Lulu's character was more fleshed out.
I really liked that the kids of the future are un-tattooed and un-peirced and don't curse, as a sort of rebellion towards the punk rock generations that came before.
I think the biggest problem was that the chapter is set only 20 yrs after 9/11, putting it only 10 years in the future from now...It felt too futuristic for only 10 years. But as I'm writing this I'm recalling the comment that Sasha makes to Bennie earlier in the book about 5 years might as well be 50 in the music industry (not sure abt the numbers for an exact quote). And the futuristic feel of the chapter sort of re-affirms that point of view to me, so its sort of a social commentary.
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What did you think of the idea of "word casings?" I have a friend who thinks that Egan was hanging onto this idea for years, just waiting to put it into a book, and for that reason, it rang false to her. How did you feel about them? And did it make sense to have this as the last chapter of the book? Was the ending satisfying to you as a reader?