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Nicholson Baker (born January 7, 1957) is a contemporary American novelist.

1 Work

Baker's highly unconventional novels de-emphasize traditional elements (particularly plot), emphasizing instead a very close level of introspection and sifting of thoughts and memories on the part of the narrator.

Web postings and other data suggest that readers divide sharply in their evaluation of Baker's work. Many feel that the work wastes their time with trivia ( Stephen King has notoriously compared Baker's work with fingernail clippings), but those who do enjoy the novels seem to appreciate them very much indeed. From the point of view of Baker's enthusiasts, his ability to minutely inspect and appreciate the contents of a human mind is fascinating and unique. They often find echoes of their own thoughts, only better expressed, in Baker's books; and they judge that Baker can be extremely funny.

The subject matter of several of Baker's books (in particular, sex and assassination) is felt by some readers to be extremely offensive. Other readers differ, admiring Baker's courage in taking on such topics with directness and honesty.

2 Life

Nicholson Baker was born in 1957 in Rochester, New York. He studied briefly at the Eastman School of Music and received his B.A. degree from Haverford College. He lives today with his wife and two children in South Berwick, Maine. Baker has been a fervent critic of librarians destroying materials. He wrote several vehement articles in The New Yorker critical of the San Francisco public library sending thousands of books to a landfill, the elimination of card catalogs, and destruction of old books and newspapers in favor of microfilm. He published a book based on his researches in this area, Double Fold, in which he accuses librarians of lying about the decay of materials and having an obsession for technological fads, both at the expense of the public and historical preservation. In 1999, he established a non-profit corporation, the American Newspaper Repository to rescue old newspapers from destruction by librarians.

In 19971997 was a common year starting on Wednesday (see link for calendar), and was designated the International Year of the Reef''. Events January January 3 NBC's Today Show Bryant Gumbel signs off for the last time January 8 Mister Rogers receives a star on t Baker received the Madison Freedom of Information Award .

3 Nicholson Baker's books

Spoiler warning: plot or ending details follow

The Mezzanine was Baker's first novel and represents the thoughts and memories of a young male office worker as he ascends an escalator up to the mezzanineA mezzanine is an intermediate floor between main floors of a building; it is often low-ceilinged, and often projects in the form of a balcony. The term is also used for the lowest balcony in a theater, or for the first few rows of seats in that balcony. of the office building where he works. The work created the genre in which Baker works and it perhaps its boldest representative. The book abounds in long footnotes, including a vivid paean to long footnoteA footnote is a note placed at the bottom of a page of a book or manuscript that comments on (or cites a reference for) a part of the main text and is normally flagged by a superscript number within the main text thus: :1 for the first footnote on the pags.

VoxFor Vox, the makers of amplifers, guitars and organs, see Vox (musical equipment). In telecommunication, a vox (short for 'voice operated switch') is an acoustoelectric transducer and a keying relay connected so that the keying relay is actuated when soun is a book about an episode of phone sex between two young single people, created something of a sensation, particularly when it emerged that it had been given as a gift by Monica LewinskyMonica Samille Lewinsky (born July 23, 1973) is an American businesswoman who was caught up in a sex scandal concerning her affair with U. President Bill Clinton while working as an intern at the White House. Lewinsky graduated with a Psychology degree fr to Bill ClintonWilliam Jefferson Clinton (born William Jefferson Blythe III on August 19, 1946) is a U. politician who served two terms as the 42nd President of the United States from 1993 to 2001. A moderate Democrat who was elected Governor of Arkansas five times, Cli. The sex scenes in the book, though quite vivid, nevertheless seem to evoke the basic approach that Baker took in The Mezzanine; in this case, he explores his accumulated thoughts and memories as they relate to sex. For some readers, Baker's obsession with detail apparently detracts from a hoped-for pornographic effect. Others, in reading the imaginative sex stories that the two protagonists make up for each another, have perceived a budding romantic affection; it is noteworthy that the last act they perform before hanging up is to exchange phone numbers.

U and I : A True Story is partly an appreciation of John Updike, partly a kind of self-exploration, a non-fiction study of how a reader engages with the work of an author.

The Fermata was (before Checkpoint) the most controversial of Baker's books; to quote the dust jacket: "Arno Strine likes to stop time and take women's clothes off. He is hard at work on his autobiography, The Fermata. It proves in the telling to be a very provocative, funny, and altogether morally confused piece of work."

A Box of Matches is in many ways a continuation of The Mezzanine, similarly mining the author's store of reflections and memories. The narrator is now middle-aged and has a family. He rises each morning at about 5:30, lights a fire in the fireplace, and ponders. The work is admired for much of the material it contains, but is rather less exuberant than the original.

Checkpoint is composed of dialogue between two old high school friends, Jay and Ben, who discuss Jay's plans to assassinate President George W. Bush. Jay is a slightly unbalanced day laborer who, in the depths of anger and desperation at Bush's actions and his inability to do anything to stop them, has traveled to Washington D.C. to kill the president, using such diverse methods as depleted uranium boulders, flying radio-controlled CD saws, homing bullets marinated with the President's picture, and hypnotized Manchurian scorpions. Ben has met Jay in a Washington D.C. hotel room, unaware that his friend is planning to commit "a major, major, major crime." Over the course of the novella Ben discusses what drove Jay to plot an assassination. Baker portrays a sense of desperation felt widely in our time, as well as the extremes of frustration that a man can be brought to. The book is unquestionably the most controversial work Baker has yet written.



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