Serifated at Birth

Take a tragically dead father, a good-hearted but distracted mother, and a clever kid engaged in a mystery-solving quest around New York. Add weighty historical background, aging WWII survivors, some plot-driving letters/diary entries/manuscript fragments, and you have the constituents of not one novel but two: Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer and The History of Love* by his wife, Nicole Krauss.

The lovely and talented Emma Garman pops her head out to discuss why Jonathan Safran Foer is not only desperately fond of email, he’s a big fat copycat.

* Editors, please: Do not allow the words distance, love, water, stones, history, footprints, weight, water, everything, anything, moon, dust, heart, or time to appear in titles ANY MORE. Unnamed editor? History AND Love? That’s one.

Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ Wednesday, March 23, 2005 12:05 pm | | Comments (2)

2 Comments »

  1. also, ixnay on cold, diary, diaries, bones, heaven, secret, girl, ya ya, snow

    OTOH, I’d like to see more books with “Bullshit” in the title. Or even one with “Cocksucker.”

    Comment by Jimmy Beck — 3/24/2005 @ 2:20 pm

  2. The Weight of Water in Heaven: Excerpts from the Secret Diaries of a Moon Girl
    By Joshua Saffron Four. Sold to Regan books for eleventy billion dollars. Watch for it at your local Borders.

    Comment by Lickona — 3/25/2005 @ 5:01 pm

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