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The Mezzanine Paperback | Pages: 135 pages
Rating: 3.83 | 7049 Users | 799 Reviews

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Title:The Mezzanine
Author:Nicholson Baker
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 135 pages
Published:January 16th 1990 by Vintage (first published October 15th 1988)
Categories:Fiction. Novels. Literature. Contemporary. American

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Although most of the action of The Mezzanine occurs on the escalator of an office building, where its narrator is returning to work after buying shoelaces, this startlingly inventive and witty novel takes us farther than most fiction written today. It lends to milk cartons the associative richness of Marcel Proust's madeleines. It names the eight most significant advances in a human life -- beginning with shoe-tying. It asks whether the hot air blowers in bathrooms really are more sanitary than towels. And it casts a dazzling light on our relations with the objects and people we usually take for granted.

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Original Title: The Mezzanine
ISBN: 0679725768 (ISBN13: 9780679725763)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Howie

Rating Based On Books The Mezzanine
Ratings: 3.83 From 7049 Users | 799 Reviews

Evaluation Based On Books The Mezzanine
This is the book for those readers who like a protagonist they can identify with. Ever break a shoelace? And for gods' sake don't skip the footnotes.

This book is so good. It's about something I've wondered about and been fascinated by but have remained unable to articulate for almost my entire life: how the material culture and physical environment of our time and place shape human experience. I've been interested in that idea since I was a little kid but have never understood how to conceptualize it clearly.At the moment I can't think of many things more exciting than discovering a novel that addresses a huge question you've had for so long

This is a little gem, with a few laughs, and the character's attention to the seemingly insignificant details during a work day are rendered significant, making your own feel not only worthy of contemplating and savoring, but necessary. "Manifestly, no condition of life could be so well adapted for the practice of philosophy as this in which chance finds you today!" As he says, upon leaving a job, your focus is upended, such that where mostly you felt the importance was the work and job itself,

The head of the main hero is freighted with such outright trash and garbage that he keeps mentally digesting that he has no time to live his life.The pursuit of truth doesn't have clear outer boundaries: it doesn't end with the book; restatement and self-disagreement and the enveloping sea of referenced authorities all continue.One has enough time to consume but one hardly has enough time to start living.

At almost 6:45pm, I approached my house, noticing with annoyance that the bin men had left the bins obstructing the driveway. I got out of the car, leaving the engine running ² , put the bins in their proper place, and drove the final few metres, parking in the shade of the laurel. I noticed it needed pruning, and worried that if we didnt do it soon, our delightful neighbours might be put to the embarrassing inconvenience of having a quiet word. As I walked to the front door, I spotted a weed,



I am a child, according to The Mezzanine wonderer, if the end of adulthood is the end of childhood nostalgia as basis of comparison. I am a child. It was a time (it felt like the kind of forever when your mind wanders and you can't remember what you were doing before when you snap out of it. This is not a long book) before I let go of my old childhood definitions. I had a name for the "personality type" of the narrator: "Protected dork". They were awkward as I was in a way that society didn't

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