Home

Human Smoke

Checkpoint

A Box of Matches

Double Fold

The Everlasting Story of Nory

The Size of Thoughts

The Fermata

Vox

U and I

Room Temperature

The Mezzanine

 

Nicholson Baker Fan Page


The Size of Thoughts (1996)

This book, subtitled Essays and Other Lumber, is a collection of nonfiction. Most of these were previously published; Lumber (a new work) comprises nearly one-half of the book. Thanks to this book (the Clip Art essay), I now know that my nail clipper was manufactured in 1974.

Opening Sentence (from the Lumber essay):

Now seems like a good time to pick a word or phrase, something short, and go after it, using the available equipment of intellectual retrieval, to see where we get.

Book Jacket Copy:

Novelist Nicholson Baker, author of The Mezzanine and Vox and called by Vanity Fair "the best American writer of his generation," here collects over a decade's worth of essays and journalism, including his controversial and highly praised 1994 article on the destruction of library card catalogs. His subjects range from the internals of the movie projector to the emotional tribulations of reading aloud; from the disappearance of hybrid punctuation to the mechanics of changing one's mind; from the lexicography of dirty talk to the manufacture of the fingernail clipper. There is a wedding address, a study of the not-so-random books that are used as props in mail-order catalogs, and a recipe. The final essay, which appears in print here for the first time, pursues through several centuries of prose and poetry the vagaries of the word lumber as a metaphor for the contents of the human mind, in what becomes in the telling a dazzlingly pedantic case study of the fanaticism of scholarship and the beauty that can reside within a piece of ordinary language.

The Size of Thoughts, through its varied forays into the realms of the overlooked, the underfunded, and the wrongfully scrapped, is a funny and thought-provoking book by one of the most distinctive stylists and thinkers of our time.

Links: