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The Waiter (2017)

di Matias Faldbakken

Altri autori: Vedi la sezione altri autori.

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
18210149,599 (3.09)7
"In a centuries-old European restaurant called The Hills, a middle-aged waiter takes pride in the unchangeable aspects of his job: the well-worn uniform, the ragged but solid tablecloths, and the regular diners. Some are there daily, like Graham "Le Gris"--also known as The Pig--and his dignified group of aesthetes; the slightly more free-spirited drinking company around Tom Sellers; and the closest one can get to personal friends of the waiter, Edgar and his young daughter, Anna. In this universe unto itself, there is scarcely any contact between the tables...until a beautiful and well-groomed young woman walks through the door and upsets the delicate balance of the restaurant and all it has come to represent Like living in a snow globe, The Waiter is a captivating study in miniature. Everything is just so, and that's exactly how the waiter needs it to be. One can understand why he becomes anxious when things begin to change. In fact, given the circumstances, anxiety just might be the most sensible response..."--Provided by publisher.… (altro)
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» Vedi le 7 citazioni

The waiter is a hidebound traditionalist working at one of Oslo's foremost dining establishment, The Hills. He exists to serve, but also has high expectations of his guests and his colleagues in terms of their conduct within The Hills' hallowed environs.

At the outset, the waiter is a man in command of his surroundings, albeit under pressure. His equilibrium begins to be disturbed when a beautiful ingenue his thinks of as Child Lady arrives and starts breaching protocols, such as showing up an hour late and ordering quadruple espressos. Child Lady begins to exert her charms on other regular guests and the increased departures from the waiter's stiff, formal routines begin to leave him frazzled and his equilibrium starts a steady slide into chaos.

This idea has the makings of a very good comedy in the style of Wodehouse, for example, or of a neat parable about the folly of tradition for the sake of it in a modern world. Sadly, it is neither; it is just a character study about the gradual discombobulation of somebody that the author doesn't really succeed in making you care about anyway. ( )
  gjky | Apr 9, 2023 |
I heard about this book on the Strong Sense of Place podcast (Restaurant episode). I found the audio on Hoopa.

The narrator--who spoke slowly and rather blandly--might have been part of the reason I didn't enjoy it. But it generally I do not enjoy judgy-old-men books. I also am not familiar with this style of restaurant and have never been a recognized regular at a restaurant, so there might be jokes or observations that I completely missed here.

I was confused by his many "serving errors" when not in particularly busy or crowded times. Is that meant to show his age catching up to him? Or his actual incompetence?

Not for me. ( )
  Dreesie | May 21, 2022 |
I really wanted to like this book and kept believing in it until the bitter end. It had all the elements of a book that could be absorbing, but it missed the mark on everything. The characters were underdeveloped, there was little plot, and when I finished it I just sat there wondering if I missed something! ( )
  hheather | Dec 9, 2019 |
I don't know what I am missing here, but while a wonderfully descriptive book...it seemingly has no point. It is as though Seinfeld was made into a book. ( )
  spicymike | Jul 14, 2019 |
Matias Falkbakken has written two other novels in addition to The Waiter but is the only one translated into English. I mention this because for a moment, I thought it must be the novel that inspired Pete Buttigieg to learn Norwegian so he could read an author’s other books. Then I recalled it was published late last year, so it came too late for that story. Nonetheless, it is a book that could inspire someone to learn Norwegian.

Very little happens in The Waiter. There is a restaurant named The Hills, one of those historic grand European restaurants with a generations-old tradition of good service and haute cuisine, complete with a musician who plays piano on the mezzanine above the tables which are covered with old linens kept spotless by The Waiter using his table crumber in his uniform whose manufacture is unchanged from the past.

The constancy of The Hills is ideal for The Waiter, a sensitive soul whose job has two criteria, as he explains, “I have to show pride in my work, and I have to be self-effacing. The pride in my work makes me adhere to rigid routines which are vital for my well-being, since being highly sensitive means that I don’t like surprises or change. The self-effacing aspect means that I can interact with and serve people without having to get involved.”

This all comes crashing down when a young woman comes to The Hills and moves from one table of guests to another, so regulars become irregular by interacting and not just with each, but with The Waiter. This creates the “complex social contexts” that creates the “inner collapse” of our narrating waiter. Over the course of five days we proceed from the constancy he loves to chaos and crisis, though really, it’s just some people eating at a restaurant.

Describing the plot of The Waiter does it an injustice, it’s magic is that with almost no plot, a tense, suspenseful story of inner turmoil and collapse is woven with prose that takes my breath away.

I think The Waiter is one of those books people either love or hate. It is mostly the inner monologue of the waiter who is stuck in his routines but who is also deeply steeped in culture so he can marvel at the fractal design of romanesco and the particulars of art, music, and history. He is never boring as he natters on, but the most peril he faces is going to the storage cellar for some wine and pinching the outside of his hand in a drawer.

The Waiter is a compelling book. I was perhaps a fifth or less into the book, wondering what it was going to be about when the next thing I knew, I was done without coming up for air and I enjoyed every minute of it.

I received an e-galley of The Waiter from the publisher through NetGalley.

★★★★★
https://tonstantweaderreviews.wordpress.com/2019/05/28/9781501197529/ ( )
  Tonstant.Weader | May 28, 2019 |
nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione

» Aggiungi altri autori (3 potenziali)

Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
Matias Faldbakkenautore primariotutte le edizionicalcolato
Menzies, AliceTraduttoreautore secondarioalcune edizioniconfermato

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Ein Hund, der Angst hat, wird niemals fett.
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Das Restaurant The Hills stammt aus einer Zeit, in der ein Schwein ein Schwein und eine Sau eine Sau war, pflegt der Maître D' zu sagen, mit anderen Worten: aus der Mitte des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts.
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"In a centuries-old European restaurant called The Hills, a middle-aged waiter takes pride in the unchangeable aspects of his job: the well-worn uniform, the ragged but solid tablecloths, and the regular diners. Some are there daily, like Graham "Le Gris"--also known as The Pig--and his dignified group of aesthetes; the slightly more free-spirited drinking company around Tom Sellers; and the closest one can get to personal friends of the waiter, Edgar and his young daughter, Anna. In this universe unto itself, there is scarcely any contact between the tables...until a beautiful and well-groomed young woman walks through the door and upsets the delicate balance of the restaurant and all it has come to represent Like living in a snow globe, The Waiter is a captivating study in miniature. Everything is just so, and that's exactly how the waiter needs it to be. One can understand why he becomes anxious when things begin to change. In fact, given the circumstances, anxiety just might be the most sensible response..."--Provided by publisher.

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