Candy House

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Jennifer Egan: Candy House (2023, Little, Brown Book Group Limited)

English language

Published Nov. 11, 2023 by Little, Brown Book Group Limited.

ISBN:
978-1-4721-5094-3
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4 stars (7 reviews)

8 editions

The Candy House

4 stars

4.5 stars (read in 2023). I thought this was great - and better than A Visit From the Goon Squad. One thing that soured it for me a little toward the end was the time spent in "See Below" revisiting "The General," which was one of my least favorite parts of Goon Squad. But that's a pretty minor complaint considering how much I enjoyed the novel overall. Fascinating ideas and characters, and lots of moving/memorable chapters ("Bright Day" is a standout). Also, having just returned from a trip to NYC, I appreciated the setting a lot.

Readable but diffuse, less than the sum of its parts?

3 stars

Remembered enjoying A Visit from the Goon Squad when it first came out, and always keen to get my hands on 'literary' treatments of technology and/or the future, but while the self-contained chapters, here, often worked well (as short stories?), the impact of the novel as a whole was limp and flat, muted by a lack of focus. Effectively-written characters and detailing, but ultimately just a heap of narrative (however engaging), with little light and shade, and a scattershot focus.

Review of 'The Candy House' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I took in the audiobook version of the first book set in this fictional universe, [b:A Visit from the Goon Squad|7331435|A Visit from the Goon Squad|Jennifer Egan|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1356844046l/7331435.SX50.jpg|8975330], but this one for me was a hardback instead. The viewpoint characters are mostly identifiable as minor players in the other story though it was hard work recalling the intricate web of relationships even though I finished that book only two months ago. There is a futuristic consciousness-uploading technology that pervades the story, even though it jumps back and forth through time before it was invented and after it became ubiquitous. It is like the Metaverse but with a scary neurological implant component as a possibility too where people can experience events uploaded by or streamed by others by entering their memories. People find it pleasant, like eating a fairy-tale candy house, but can also be dangerous.

I didn't have rapport …

reviewed The Candy House by Jennifer Egan

Didn't like it

3 stars

I liked the concept of uploading your memories to the internet, and having corporate incentives to share them. . However, this entire book felt like an introduction. New characters and new events, often in different time periods every chapter. They did become somewhat intertwined, but not in a way where I felt it all came together. At the end I didn't feel like I had any real sense of any of the characters or why they did the things they did. I also didn't find that it really stimulated my thinking at all about what a world where many uploaded their memories to the internet for all to see would be like. It was all just too disconnected. I have not read the first book, A Visit from the Goon Squad, where many of these characters were first introduced. Perhaps that would have helped, but I wouldn't recommend it as …

avatar for daniel

rated it

3 stars
avatar for memorysnow

rated it

5 stars

Subjects

  • Fiction, psychological
  • American fiction (fictional works by one author)