Ultimately, the "closeness" of the title is the antidote to the "loud" chaos of the world; it represents the intimate, small-scale connections—a touch, a shared silence, or the word "Son"—that allow the characters to survive the "Something" and "Nothing" of their lives.
The novel famously concludes with a flip-book sequence of a man falling from the World Trade Center. When flipped in reverse, the man "falls upward," offering a heartbreaking, reverse-chronological fantasy where the tragedy never occurs.
In Jonathan Safran Foer’s Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close , grief is not a quiet or orderly process. For nine-year-old Oskar Schell, the loss of his father in the September 11 attacks is a sensory assault—an experience that is both "extremely loud" in its chaotic emotional noise and "incredibly close" in its haunting physical proximity. 1. The Language of "Heavy Boots"
