logo

31 pages 1 hour read

Nicholas Sparks

The Notebook

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1996

A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.

Themes

Memory

During their fourteen years apart, Noah’s memories of Allie sustain him, as well as torment him. He works very hard to distract himself, but he is never able to forget her. He codifies his memories of her through the letters he writes, the diary he keeps, and the poetry he reads—all of which reminds him of her. When Allie returns to New Bern, he describes her as a living memory.

Allie’s experience of Noah is similar, but her memories of Noah are tinged with regret. She moves on rather than seeking Noah out to see why he never wrote to her. But she also writes letters to him, reinforcing her own memories of their summer together. When they reunite, it is almost as if the fourteen years never happened. Allie and Noah are happy for decades, until Alzheimer’s erodes Allie’s memories. Soon she cannot remember who she is or recognize Noah and her children. Memories are a precious commodity in The Notebook. The notebook that Noah reads to Allie from is itself a monument to their memories, preserving his own, as well as hers. During their time at Creekside, the return of her memory is what inspires Noah’s devotion.

Being True to One’s Self

Noah pursues his projects, passions, and Allie with the same intensity. He never wavers or compromises when he knows what he should be doing. This gives him a self-actualized quality that Allie realizes she has lacked. Noah does not answer to the expectations of others and does not feel limited by the lower social class in which he has been raised.

Allie, on the other hand, sets aside her own desires for the wishes of her parents, whose expectations are born from generations of wealth and traditions about status. Lon, while a good man, comes from the same tradition. Allie sacrifices her art and fourteen years with Noah to do what she believes is the right thing. When she is back in New Bern with Noah, she realizes that she has cheated herself of the very things that would make her the happiest and that living for others can never fulfill one’s own desires.

The Importance of Art

In various ways, Noah describes all art as an attempt to express something inexpressible. He views Allie as a poem and sees her desires in her painting. He is never sure why he loves poetry with such intensity, but his obsession with poems follows him through his entire life. The difference between him and Allie is that he does not question where his desire comes from; he simply pursues it. Allie believes that she is meant to be a painter, but when Lon and her family do not understand her ambition in the same way that Noah and her professor do, she stops painting at great personal cost. She is not aware of how badly she misses painting until Noah inspires her to start again. Art enriches both of their lives and binds them together.

blurred text
blurred text
blurred text
blurred text