LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Notebook, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Love and Destiny
Wealth and Fulfillment
Memory, Pain, and Mortality
Comfort and Logic vs. Passion and Instinct
Summary
Analysis
As the sun comes up on a frigid winter morning, 80-year-old Noah Calhoun sits bundled up in his room in the nursing home where he lives and looks back on his life. He wonders how his story will end. His life, he says, is not easy to explain. Though Noah knows he has lived a simple and “common” life by most people’s standards, he’s also loved another person with his entire heart and soul—and this, he says, has “always been enough” for him. Noah knows that he’s chosen the right path. He would not choose to live his life, which he feels is equal parts love story and tragedy, any other way.
As readers meet Noah Calhoun, he explains almost immediately the value system by which he’s lived his life. Love has been the most important force in Noah’s whole existence—and even though the end of his life is near, the love he’s known has enabled him to feel no regrets about any of the choices he’s made.
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Quotes
Noah has been ill for years—he feels worn out and deflated. This morning, however, he knows that he cannot sit listlessly in his chair because he has to go somewhere. As Noah walks through the lonely, quiet hallways of the nursing home, he hears the sounds of his fellow patients in various stages of distress. As he passes the nurses’ station, he overhears the nurses talking amongst themselves, hoping Noah’s mission today goes well.
Noah is an ill man, yet his sense of determination remains intact. Given that love is the most important thing to Noah, it seems that the driving force behind the mission that steers his days and defines his hours must be love.
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As Noah arrives at his destination—the room of another patient—he greets the doctors and nurses tending to the crying woman inside and then sits in his regular chair in the corner of the room. The doctors and nurses leave the room, and Noah is alone with the woman. She doesn’t look at him and doesn’t seem to know who he is. Though the woman doesn’t acknowledge him, Noah puts on his glasses, takes a magnifying lens out of his pocket, opens up a notebook, and begins to read aloud from it. Every time he repeats these gestures, he wonders if today will be the day it “happen[s.]” The possibility, he says, is all that keeps him going. Though the odds and science are against him, Noah believes in miracles—and as he begins to read, he hopes that miracles will prevail.
In this passage, Sparks introduces the titular notebook: an object which folds into the novel’s larger symbol of writing. Within this novel, objects and ideas having to do with the written word symbolize memory’s power to enrich one’s life in the midst of great pain. Thus, it’s clear Noah uses the notebook as a way to connect himself—and his unnamed female companion—to pleasant memories of happier times.