

The book was adapted to film in 2005 with Elijah Wood in the lead role. The paperback rights for Everything Is Illuminated later went for reportedly close to $1 million. Since Foer admitted to doing little research (although he did take a trip similar to the fictional Foer's, inspiring the book), and the historical fiction sections earned some critical gripes for being uneven (Salon called them "dime-store García Márquez"), the chief strength of Everything Is Illuminated lies in a scope and wit that are stunning from an author who was still finishing up college at the time he began it. Publishers Weekly saw "demented genius" in it and Francine Prose, who also used the adjective "demented" for Foer's writing, noted in the New York Times Book Review, "The problem is, you keep laughing out loud, losing your place, starting again, then stopping because you're tempted to call your friends and read them long sections of Jonathan Safran Foer's assured, hilarious prose." Despite the novel's decidedly earnest and serious themes, what's most striking about it is its strange, resonant humor.

The story unfolds both through Alex's eyes and in a later correspondence with Jonathan, who reveals chapters of a fictionalized version of Augustine's story. The two set out-with an old picture, and the name Augustine-to find the woman, bringing Alex's grandfather and an odiferous seeing-eye dog. It was only four days previous that he made his eye blue from a mismanagement with a brick wall." Alex's client, an American Jew named Jonathan Safran Foer, wants to find a woman who hid his grandfather from the Nazis. Alex's comical, dictionary-aided writing consists of not-quite-right sentences such as "He is always promenading into things. After all, the backstory was publicist-ready: Everything Is Illuminated began as a thesis at Princeton under advisers Joyce Carol Oates and Jeffrey Eugenides, and Houghton Mifflin reportedly paid somewhere around half a million dollars for the rights.įoer achieved a fresh, creative approach to the English language by viewing it through the eyes of his foreign narrator, a young Ukranian man named Alex who works in a family tour operating business targeted toward American Jews seeking their family roots. Recent literary history is rife with auspicious debuts, and Jonathan Safran Foer's arrival was one of 2002's brightest and most media-friendly. His stories have been published in the Paris Review, The New Yorker and Conjunctions.


He is the editor of the anthology A Convergence of Birds: Original Fiction and Poetry Inspired by the Work of Joseph Cornell, a Boston Globe bestseller. Jonathan Safran Foer was born in 1977 in Washington, D.C.
