54 pages • 1 hour read
Jarrett LernerA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Content Warning: This section of the guide discusses anti-fat bias, bullying, body dysmorphia, and disordered eating.
The novel begins with an individual statement that uses the descriptor “fat” as an insult. This comment wakes Will up to the extent of anti-fat bias around him at both the individual and systemic levels.
Nick’s comment makes Will realize that his “size mattered” to those around him and that many people would have a bias against him because he is fat. He realizes that he is in a school “full of skinny kids / and thin teachers” (41). There are no fat people around him, so Will begins to think of being fat as being a personal flaw, internalizing anti-fat bias. He thinks about how, for him, an innocuous and forgettable moment for Nick was like
an atom bomb
going off
and wrecking everything
in its path (52).
Far from being a forgettable comment from an individual, the comment indicates more widely held societal beliefs stigmatizing fat people, which continue to affect Nick.
Will notices anti-fat designs all around him. He reflects that whoever made the school desks is thin. He recounts how he has to
suck in my stomach
and hunch my shoulders
and collapse my chest
just to fit […]
feeling squeezed
and pressed
and unable
to forget
for even
a second
how fat
and out of place
and unwelcome
I am (46).
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