47 pages • 1 hour read
In The Magician’s Assistant, Patchett uses magic to investigate the ways in which people deceive themselves and others, and to highlight the beauty of the human experience. This novel is full of magical moments, such as when Dot views the adult version of her long-lost son on the television and says, “You can’t imagine what that’s like, thinking your child is probably having some miserable life somewhere because of what you’ve done to him and then seeing him on television, a big famous magician” (77). In this sense, the motif of magic operates as a hopeful tone, implying that life itself can be just as exciting and unexpected as the magic performed onstage.
The novel also features several allusions to eras in Parsifal’s life that Sabine regards as magically happy. Because the novel begins with Parsifal’s death, Sabine spends much of the novel reflecting on her past experiences with him. In this context, the happy decades she spent with him become magical and are celebrated through Patchett’s use of a bittersweet tone. The narrative describes this past era as “a completely different lifetime, one without sickness, without knowledge of past or future.
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By Ann Patchett