Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close Questions

  1. Why does the book have three different narrators? Why does Oskar write in a more "traditional" style, while his Grandparents write letters? How do the different styles come together to tell a complete story?
  2. How do the different characters in the novel cope with the loss of Thomas, Oskar's dad?
  3. What did you expect Oskar to find in the end? How did Oskar feel about this somewhat disappointing conclusion to a months-long search?
  4. Each narrator has survived, in some way or another, a terrorist attack. How are their experiences similar? How are they different?
  5. The book has been described as a story about a boy who loses his Dad on 9/11. But is it really about 9/11?
  6. Are the images and use of colored text a gimmick, or do they enhance the story? How would the story have been different without these visual tricks?
  7. Does Jonathan Safran Foer accurately capture the voice of nine-year-old Oskar, or does Oskar sound more like the twenty-eight-year-old author?
  8. Oskar wonders "If Dad were boiled down to one word, what would that word be?" (7.98) What one word would describe Oskar? What one word would describe you?