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Mezzanine
Mezzanine | Nicholson Baker
9 posts | 21 read | 20 to read
In his startling, witty, and inexhaustibly inventive first novel—first published in 1986 and now reissued as a Grove Press paperback—the author of Vox and The Fermata uses a one-story escalator ride as the occasion for a dazzling reappraisal of everyday objects and rituals. From the humble milk carton to the act of tying one’s shoes, The Mezzanine at once defamiliarizes the familiar world and endows it with loopy and euphoric poetry. Nicholson Baker’s accounts of the ordinary become extraordinary through his sharp storytelling and his unconventional, conversational style. At first glance, The Mezzanine appears to be a book about nothing. In reality, it is a brilliant celebration of things, simultaneously demonstrating the value of reflection and the importance of everyday human human experiences.
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review
ImperfectCJ
The Mezzanine | Nicholson Baker
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Pickpick

The form of this novel---a footnote-heavy deep dive into one young man's trip up an escalator at the end of his lunch break---could have been clunky, but I actually found it fairly smooth reading. Maybe the narrator has an anxiety disorder or is just very particular, but either way I enjoyed the way his personality is revealed bit by bit through his interior monologue. I love his rant about people who stand still on escalators.

ImperfectCJ I'm very disappointed that I don't have a photo of the Rosslyn Metro Station escalator to post with this review. It's the most epic escalator I've ever encountered (although quite different from the one in this novel). 1y
50 likes1 comment
blurb
ImperfectCJ
The Mezzanine | Nicholson Baker
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Yesterday was the car dealership, today is the hair salon. I haven't been to a salon for maybe seven years, and this is my first time ever under a dryer, but I knew enough to bring reading material (of course, I bring reading material everywhere, so it's perhaps not a testament to my wisdom as much as my consistency).

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Vivlio_Gnosi
The Mezzanine | Nicholson Baker
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Intrigued to add this #novel to my #TBR stack.
#GreenvilleSC #JoesPlace

review
LoverofLit
The Mezzanine | Nicholson Baker
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Panpan

I really wanted to like this one, with the concept of the book being set in only one day and consisting of a regular guy and his introspective thoughts while taking his lunch break but this was so SO BORING. I can imagine someone in my brain on my break would find me just as boring. Having a whole chapter on the difference between paper and plastic straws, my mind wandered constantly. I'm glad it was a short book 👎

LoverofLit #pop19 #popsugar2019 #popsugarreadingchallenge A book that takes place in a single day 5y
mreads The physical book had half pages of footnotes 😕. Did have a flashback when he was thinking about library checkout with the big grey box that took photos or something, I don't remember how it worked. 5y
LoverofLit @mreads He does talk about that. A lot of the books was spent reminiscing on the changes since childhood. Paper to plastic straws. Milk delivery to your home to plastic jugs bought at a supermarket. 5y
22 likes3 comments
review
Phinfluenza
The Mezzanine | Nicholson Baker
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Pickpick

Never before have I been able to relate so personally and fully to a character. Taking place as a man reminisces about his work day, lunch hour, and life in general along his ascent to the mezzanine office where he works, via an escalator. A realistic look into the way our minds wander and each of our senses give way to memories and questions. Funny, thought provoking, and definitely worth the read.

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TaraBlack
The Mezzanine | Nicholson Baker
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Pickpick

My experience of this book was one of simultaneous boredom and hysteria, punctuated with moments of laughing out loud. It is an ode to escalators and shoe laces; it revels in the mundane. It's Seinfeld if Seinfeld wasn't asking for the laugh. Very quick read. Don't touch if you are annoyed by footnotes.

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TaraBlack
The Mezzanine | Nicholson Baker
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Can you take seriously a person's theory of language when you know he was delighted by ... cowboy movies?

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TaraBlack
The Mezzanine | Nicholson Baker
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"I was now permanently arrested at an intermediate stage of personal development."

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LindsaySeddon
The Mezzanine | Nicholson Baker
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Mehso-so

One of a bunch I found on the "experimental fiction" display at Waterstones Deansgate.

Set over one lunch hour, it extensively explores topics you don't usually give a second thought - shoelaces, milk spouts, stapling.

The main character is quietly eccentric and I loved his shameless attention to detail.

I would recommend this be read with decent pauses in between chapters as it's quite intense without.