Top 3 books by Jonathan Safran Foer

An author who is easy to lose track of because as soon as you find him among the best sellers of fiction as he assaults the essayist to return to the novel several years later. But perhaps that is why it should be taken into account more if possible. Because only those who publish books without the regular cadence of the best sellers end up having something interesting to tell, beyond the artifice to which we narratively indulge in the taste of entertainment, which is not bad either.

When one reads a novel by Jonathan Safran Foer he soon guesses the reason for this variability between fiction and non-fiction. Because when an author, or his characters, tell you things with a depth of depth, sacrificed in part for the sake of the plot, it is undoubtedly due to the fact that the writer on duty leaves things in the pipeline. And the test It is the best way to collect all those hidden treasures to speak at ease and end up becoming a benchmark for environmental awareness.

All this in the case of a dizzying literary career since the twentysomething who captivated everyone with his first novel back in 2002. Without a doubt, a writer who will create a school.

Top 3 Recommended Books by Jonathan Safran Foer

Everything is illuminated

It will be a matter of discovering that light that links us to the world, piercing us with its blinding clarity to decipher what we are and the sum of hazards that placed us here ...

A novel testimony that tells us the journey of a young American Jew in search of his origins and that will take him to Ukraine to find the woman who supposedly saved his grandfather from the Nazis. He will be accompanied on the journey by Alex, a young Ukrainian, his grandfather and his dog, on a journey that is as comical as it is tragic, which shows the close bond between the past and the present. With precocious and risky mastery, Foer describes the adventures to discover his roots and unravel the mystery of his legendary grandfather, who miraculously escaped from the Nazis. Funny, tragic and moving.

Everything is illuminated

So strong so close

At the recent passing of the twentieth anniversary of the fall of the Twin Towers of NY, some friends and I remembered how next all that sounded to us. In part it is because each new 11/XNUMX the images come back to haunt us, but the same happens with each repeated date on the calendar and its memory is not so fresh. The atrocious and traumatic nature of the matter went a long way in literature as well. Except that this novel, unlike the search for easy tunes from the tragic point of view, knows how to tell us the ultimate significance of the absences stolen from life.

Oskar, a resourceful and sensitive boy, finds a box with a key hidden among the belongings of his father, who passed away on the fateful 11/XNUMX. Taking the discovery as one of the clue games that his father organized, he decides to undertake the mission of finding the lock that opens the mysterious key. The search will take you through the streets of a battered New York, and meet people who will teach you, from their personal experiences, how you can survive in love and pain. 

After the excellent reception of Everything is illuminated, Jonathan Safran Foer's second novel was received as a story as creative, tender and delicate as the previous one. A story of love and survival that was made into a movie and was nominated for two Oscars.

So strong so close

I'm here

In Genesis, God asks Abraham to sacrifice his son, Isaac, to which Abraham responds obediently: "Here I am." This replica serves as inspiration to Jonathan Safran Foer to write his first novel in more than ten years: in today's Washington and over the course of a month, the reader watches the process by which the life of Jacob Bloch collapses, with his three children as privileged witnesses of the failure of their marriage.

The personal drama unfolds parallel to another catastrophe of much greater dimensions: an earthquake in the Middle East devastates Israel, pushing the international scene to radicalize. Jacob must, like Abraham, face the situation. Find your place in the world as a father, husband, and American Jew. And say: Here I am. An autobiographical novel about his experience as the father of a family that is breaking down.

I'm here
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