Book description
'Close your eyes and slowly count backward from ten.' America,
the near future. A young spy on a mission logs her observations. The
result is an intense thriller, and a minute dissection of the
experience of a woman whose beauty is also her camouflage, for whom
control relies on submission: a woman whose success - whose life -
depends on being seen and not seen. Originally published online via
Twitter by @NYerFiction, Jennifer Egan's first new fiction since the
phenomenal success of A Visit From the Goon Squad is a taut,
compulsive work of unrelenting genius. 'My working title for this
story was "Lessons Learned" and my hope was to tell a story
whose shape would emerge from the lessons the narrator derived
from each step in the action, rather than from straightforward
narration of the action itself. The atomised structure made this piece
seem like a possible candidate for serialization on Twitter -
something I'd long been interested in trying. Writing fiction for
Twitter is not a new idea, of course, but it's a rich one - because of
the intimacy of reaching people through their phones, and because of
the odd poetry that can happen in 140 characters. 'Another impulse
behind 'Black Box' was to take a character from a naturalistic story
and travel with her into a different genre. Jon Scieszka first put
this idea into my head with his spectacular meta-fictional picture
book, The True Story of the Three Little Pigs!, in which the
three pigs move through books drawn in radically different styles,
transforming visually into the style of each world they enter. I
wondered whether I might do something analogous with a character from
my novel, A Visit From the Goon Squad: create a cartoon version
of that person, for example - or, in this case, a spy thriller
version. I wrote the story by hand in a Japanese notebook that had
eight rectangles on each page, and it took me a year to control and
calibrate that material into what is now "Black Box".'