45 pages • 1 hour read
Walker PercyA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Early in his life, Binx finds himself unmoored and without an established family unit. The long-term effects of the early loss of his father, compounded by the trauma of war, exacerbates this sense of loss. Though Binx’s Aunt Emily stepped in at a critical time to provide Binx with stability and an education, his mother started a new family without Binx, which may have contributed to his sense of familial disconnect. Binx’s inner workings, which make up the bulk of the novel, reveal an inner resilience marked by self-centeredness. Though Binx has managed to survive his early losses and to live a seemingly successful adult life as a stockbroker, his psychological and emotional development are arrested, which sometimes negatively impacts his relationships.
Though Binx’s relationships are generally positive, if somewhat superficial, he has an exceptional connection with his cousin, Kate. His particular closeness with Kate is marred only by the fact that she is even more unstable than he is, due to the loss of her fiancé. Though she survived the car accident that took her fiancé’s life the night before their wedding, her resilience is unreliable. She walked away from the accident physically unharmed but psychologically damaged; years later, she and her family are still coping with the fallout of this tragic incident.
Binx experiences negative feelings as a result of contemplating his existence; further, the existence of others in his life also prove challenging to him. His internal wrestling with issues around meaning, authenticity and the state of being alive all manifest as unreliable narration throughout the course of this novel. At times, neither Binx nor the reader truly knows what Binx is really thinking or feeling about certain people with whom he interacts, and this tension brings energy and pace to the novel. Most of the time, even in the most intimate of moments, Binx feels hopelessly alienated from the people around him, and the despair that results from this isolation is what he means by the “malaise.”
Binx references a “search” at several places in the novel, and this search involves details around Binx’s father, who died when Binx was still school-age. Though Binx never articulates what exactly he is searching for, a search for authenticity makes the most sense, as he seems most critical of other people when they are being phony or posturing in some way that he finds offensive, which suggests that he places significance on sincerity. As well, Binx claims to feel truly alive only very rarely, and the deadness he observes in others around him is characterized by a sense of abject alienation.
By Walker Percy