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Reviews the candy house
Reviews the candy house








reviews the candy house

Nowadays, people have 5,000 Facebook friends but no one to help them move or someone to call at 3 am. This book made me nostalgic for the era before the internet, when you could go to the beach and listen to the waves softly crash upon the shores instead of listening to someone screaming into a cell phone. Rarely has fiction caused so much self-reflection. This book is about technology, how it feels so good yet has unintended consequences. At first, there didn’t even seem to be a common theme amongst the chapters until about 40% of the way through. However, each of the chapters were very interesting. It feels as though a different person authored each chapter. Every chapter is written in a completely different style with a different character and in a different time period. The Candy House is very hard to describe. With a focus on social media, gaming, and alternate worlds, you can almost experience moving among dimensions in a role-playing game.​ Egan delivers a fierce and exhilarating testament to the tenacity and transcendence of human longing for real connection, love, family, privacy and redemption. Intellectually dazzling and extraordinarily moving, The Candy House is a bold, brilliant imagining of a world that is moments away. In the world of Egan’s spectacular imagination, there are “counters” who track and exploit desires and there are “eluders,” those who understand the price of taking a bite of the Candy House.

reviews the candy house

Egan introduces these characters in an astonishing array of styles-from omniscient to first person plural to a duet of voices, an epistolary chapter, and a chapter of tweets.

reviews the candy house

In spellbinding linked narratives, Egan spins out the consequences of Own Your Unconscious through the lives of multiple characters whose paths intersect over several decades. Within a decade, Bix’s new technology, Own Your Unconscious-that allows you access to every memory you’ve ever had, and to share every memory in exchange for access to the memories of others-has seduced multitudes. He’s forty, with four kids, and restless when he stumbles into a conversation with mostly Columbia professors, one of whom is experimenting with downloading or “externalizing” memory. Staggeringly successful and brilliant tech entrepreneur Bix Bouton is desperate for a new idea. From one of the most dazzling and iconic writers of our time and winner of the Pulitzer Prize, an electrifying, deeply moving novel about the quest for authenticity, privacy, and meaning in a world where our memories are no longer our own-featuring characters from A Visit from the Goon Squad.










Reviews the candy house