Friday, August 31, 2018

Thoughts on The Mezzanine

''The Mezzanine,'' an atypical short story by Nicholson Baker, is definitely not like any other story you’d read: it has no main themes, no standard plot, no conflict. When somebody who’s read the book describes it to you, it would probably sound ridiculous – (a man who tells us, in painstaking detail, his thought process while riding an escalator to his office??) – yet its 135 pages most likely contain more deep perceptions about our everyday life and the things we often overlook or take for granted compared to any other modern novel you’d come across.

It is a very deep (and humorous) book about the mind – in particular, the exhaustive, continuous thought processes we tend to have while coming across seemingly trivial things and daily events in our everyday lives.

One particular thing I liked about the main character, Howie – a very weird individual who is a little obsessed with over-analyzing every little thought he has and his inane daily encounters and brief social interactions – is his eloquence when describing these things. He makes something that at first seems so unimportant and kind of stupid at the surface, transform into something so mesmerizing and dumbfounding when he puts in his own words. He makes the reader take a second look at things and enjoy these small things in life we usually take for granted. Howie also attempts to re-analyze some of his childhood memories so that he can come to terms with the nostalgia he feels sometimes.

It is clear that Howie keeps learning new things every moment of his life, developing deeper understandings of things nonstop. Howie himself indicates this when he says “…but the truth was that it was only the latest in a fairly long sequence of partially forgotten, inarticulable experiences, finally now reaching a point that I had paid attention to it for the first time.”
In conclusion, I see Nicholson Baker’s exceptional novel as a very strongly voiced short story narrated by an inspiring protagonist. 

2 comments:

  1. I agree with you, Baker’s writing really makes the book interesting. At face value the book really does sound boring but when you read it, it sort of changes your point of view. Things that used to be boring are now seen as very interesting through howie’s description of it. I think his writing makes life seem more exciting.

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  2. I 100% agree with your opinion on The Mezzanine. When I first saw what our summer reading was going to be I was dreading it, because to hear it described, it seems like such a boring book. Although, once I started reading it, I found that it was actually pretty interesting. I definitely think Howie could be described as inspiring.

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