Posts Tagged ‘Bildungsroman’

the beautiful miscellaneous by Dominic Smith

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

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Nathan Nelson is, as a child, involved in a terrible car accident, dies briefly, and awakens from a coma “gifted” with synethesia (sort of like a permanent acid trip: hearing colors, tasting sounds, smelling television, etc.) and an Eidetic (or photographic) memory. His father Samuel had for years, to no avail, tried to coax out Nathan’s genius, only to discover that his son was average, normal, unremarkable.

But after the accident, Nathan’s parents send him to a special school for special children, including: a teenaged girl who is “medically intuitive” and can diagnose cancer, tumors, multiple sclerosis, by the tone/timbre of one’s voice; a blind, sex-obsessed piano prodigy; a savant who can’t tie his shoes but knows what day of the week 12 October 1843 fell on; and a man who replicates citiscapes in his head and then builds them.

The book explores how the children’s gifts isolate them from the rest of the world, and how their parents’ expectations shape and preclude certain paths before they (the children) have any say in the matter. It’s a beautiful novel that verges on poetry at times, due to the narrator’s synesthetic descriptions and the writer’s rhetorical brilliance. It is a novel about the Permanent Search, the sort of hyper-stringent expectations we have of life that preclude happiness and keep us forever Outside of what we need desperately to be In.

The following excerpt best summarizes the novel’s conflict. It is an apostrophic letter written by the protagonist Nathan’s father to a Higher power he (the father) doesn’t believe in, yet nevertheless dedicates his life to chasing, in a way.

Samuel Nelson’s Letter to God


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