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The Moviegoer Paperback – April 14, 1998
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The dazzling novel that established Walker Percy as one of the major voices in Southern literature is now available for the first time in Vintage paperback.
The Moviegoer is Binx Bolling, a young New Orleans stockbroker who surveys the world with the detached gaze of a Bourbon Street dandy even as he yearns for a spiritual redemption he cannot bring himself to believe in. On the eve of his thirtieth birthday, he occupies himself dallying with his secretaries and going to movies, which provide him with the "treasurable moments" absent from his real life. But one fateful Mardi Gras, Binx embarks on a hare-brained quest that outrages his family, endangers his fragile cousin Kate, and sends him reeling through the chaos of New Orleans' French Quarter. Wry and wrenching, rich in irony and romance, The Moviegoer is a genuine American classic.
- Print length241 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherVintage
- Publication dateApril 14, 1998
- Dimensions5.2 x 0.6 x 8 inches
- ISBN-109780375701962
- ISBN-13978-0375701962
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Editorial Reviews
From the Inside Flap
The dazzling novel that established Walker Percy as one of the major voices in Southern
literature is now available for the first time in Vintage paperback.
The Moviegoer is Binx Bolling, a young New Orleans stockbroker who surveys the world with
the detached gaze of a Bourbon Street dandy even as he yearns for a spiritual redemption he
cannot bring himself to believe in. On the eve of his thirtieth birthday, he occupies
himself dallying with his secretaries and going to movies, which provide him with the
"treasurable moments" absent from his real life. But one fateful Mardi Gras, Binx embarks
on a hare-brained quest that outrages his family, endangers his fragile cousin Kate, and
sends him reeling through the chaos of New Orleans' French Quarter. Wry and wrenching, rich
in irony and romance, The Moviegoer is a genuine American classic.
From the Back Cover
"Clothed in originality, intelligence, and a fierce regard for man's fate. . . . Percy has a rare talent for making his people look and sound as though they were being seen and heard for the first time by anyone." --Time
"A brilliant novel. . . . Percy touches the rim of so many human mysteries." --Harper's
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : 0375701966
- Publisher : Vintage
- Publication date : April 14, 1998
- Edition : Later prt.
- Language : English
- Print length : 241 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9780375701962
- ISBN-13 : 978-0375701962
- Item Weight : 6.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.2 x 0.6 x 8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,051,961 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #398 in Greece Travel Guides
- #1,540 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Walker Percy (1916–1990) was one of the most prominent American writers of the twentieth century. Born in Birmingham, Alabama, he was the oldest of three brothers in an established Southern family that contained both a Civil War hero and a U.S. senator. Acclaimed for his poetic style and moving depictions of the alienation of modern American culture, Percy was the bestselling author of six fiction titles—including the classic novel The Moviegoer (1961), winner of the National Book Award—and fifteen works of nonfiction. In 2005, Time magazine named The Moviegoer one of the best English-language books published since 1923.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this novel to be an incredible first novel with beautiful, spare prose and an excellent existential journey. Moreover, the book's style receives positive feedback, with one customer describing it as a true work of original art. However, customers disagree on the character development, with some finding the descriptions lovely while others find the characters uninteresting. Additionally, the pacing is mixed, with some praising its strength while others find it disjointed, and customers disagree on the book's insight, with some appreciating its existential themes while others view it as nihilistic. The story quality also receives mixed reactions, with several customers finding it unengaging and monotonous.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as an incredible first novel that's worth the time to read.
"I just finished reading this great novel for the third time because I wanted to begin the year with an experience of something that I knew was great...." Read more
"...This is a funny book, an endearing book. The writing is gasp inducing gorgeous...." Read more
"...The Moviegoer" strikes me as a solid, very good 4-star. The novel has little plot to speak of...." Read more
"I can't believe it has taken me so long to read this incredible first novel...." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking, describing it as an excellent existential journey.
"...with each time that I have read it is that it is one of those singular novels that presents a first person narrator with a very unique perspective..." Read more
"...I don't think this is an existential novel. I think it is a Christian Morality Tale." Read more
"This review is less academic and far more personal...." Read more
"...and, for those who know literature, a wonderful set of references to American Transcendentalism, Joyce, Faulkner, and the languages of post-WWII..." Read more
Customers praise the beautiful spare prose and flowing diction of the writing, describing it as brilliant and very readable.
"Percy's a good writer as far as his prose and his descriptive abilities go but I can't for the life of me figure out what he's trying to get at here...." Read more
"...This is a funny book, an endearing book. The writing is gasp inducing gorgeous...." Read more
"This novel is at times tedious because of both his subject matter and his antiquated vocabulary, yet it kept my attention...." Read more
"...However—and this is a large caveat—"The Moviegoer" put one very fine writer, Walker Percy, on the map, with promise of more to come, which was..." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's style, describing it as beautiful, with one customer noting its vividly personal approach and another highlighting its brilliant mid-century coloring.
"...The scenes between Lonnie and Binx are utterly exquisite...." Read more
"...the way the author portrays these unanswerable questions, that is so elegant and incisive...." Read more
"...can affront others and conspire in private - but in a gentile and fair-minded fashion...." Read more
"...as a an author and publisher, I find that the book not only holds its beauty, humor and sadness over time, but has taken on greater significance..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the character development in the book, with some appreciating the lovely descriptions while others find the characters uninteresting.
"...a tedious read, especially because Binx himself is a stupendously uninteresting character...." Read more
"...read it is that it is one of those singular novels that presents a first person narrator with a very unique perspective and way of viewing reality...." Read more
"...However, in 2014 the protagonist comes across as somewhat arrogant and whiny...." Read more
"...is the conceptual basis of the book and the mental processes of the protagonist incredibly articulated, but the author's ability to use metaphor is..." Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the book's insights, with some appreciating its existential themes while others find it nihilistic.
"...singular novels that presents a first person narrator with a very unique perspective and way of viewing reality...." Read more
"...His protagonist has some kind of vague existential dread that's never really fleshed out...." Read more
"...The internet lacks the script and direction of movies, but closer resembles reality and offers almost tactile fantasies - that your internet..." Read more
"...This is a rambling, introspective, nihilistic book with a narrator who is at his core fundamentally unlikable...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some praising its strength while others find it very disjointed and note that the title is misleading.
"...thinking about it a few days I realize that this book just got on my nerves quite a bit and I really actually didn’t like it very much or picking it..." Read more
"...movies - everything more beautiful, loves more intense, and the meaning is clear. The internet offers a different escape than movies...." Read more
"...However, in 2014 the protagonist comes across as somewhat arrogant and whiny...." Read more
"The book arrived promptly and in good condition, just as ordered." Read more
Customers find the book's story unengaging and monotonous, with multiple reviews noting the lack of plot and dull characters.
"...The novel has little plot to speak of...." Read more
"...in genuine prose here and there, but at the same time, this book is just so aimless, rambling, and mundane...." Read more
"...the first-person point of view where a somewhat disjointed and puzzling storyline reflects the difficulties of the fascinating main character...." Read more
"...is at times tedious because of both his subject matter and his antiquated vocabulary, yet it kept my attention...." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2015I just finished reading this great novel for the third time because I wanted to begin the year with an experience of something that I knew was great. The last time I read it was just over 14 years ago as part of the preparation for my first (and to date, only) trip to New Orleans. The impression that I've been left with each time that I have read it is that it is one of those singular novels that presents a first person narrator with a very unique perspective and way of viewing reality. It coats every page of the novel and it is so thorough that the character (or the character's creator) even creates his own lexicon for categorizing and flavoring the world in a similar way as the narrators of Kurt Vonnegut's 'Cat's Cradle' and Richard Brautigan's 'In Watermelon Sugar'. We see the world through the lens of Binx Bolling's idiosyncratic and distinct perception.
Binx sprinkles his narrative with cinematic references, naturally, and uses the personas of movie stars to interpret the world around him. These analogies are more meaningful when one is familiar with the actors he is referencing. Even when the reader isn't, however, the analogy somehow makes sense or at least can understand why the moment is significant to Binx. One could even assemble the titles of all the movies he sees or cites throughout the novel and conduct a Binx Bolling Moviegoing Festival.
On the surface, not a great deal occurs externally in the novel. It takes place the week of Mardi Gras on the eve of Binx's 30th birthday. Reaching the age of 30 is a pivotal milestone in the life of a man, signifying a new stage of manhood and an age of stock-taking. Binx's Aunt Emily certainly sees it that way and he knows that she would like him to fulfill his deceased father's dream of his son going to medical school. Initially, however, she summons him because she is concerned about her stepdaughter Kate, who was traumatized by the death of her fiancée in a car accident and whose mood swings and reliance on pills are escalating to possibly disastrous proportions. She wants Binx to provide guidance and stability for Kate, especially at this particularly fragile time.
Binx is an odd choice of one to turn to for stability. He is a stockbroker who spends most of his free time going to movies and pursuing romance with each of his successive secretaries. When he is not doing that he is engaged in what he calls the search. According to Binx, "the search is what anyone would undertake if he were not sunk in the everydayness of his own life." Binx wants to be delivered from the mundane qualities of a routinized life, in which he is fully entrenched. He has a regular work schedule. He tunes in faithfully to the radio show "This I Believe" every night. He goes through the motions of middle class existence and yet through all of it he seeks the search not so much for reaching the specific goal or destination as because it is an alternative to not seeking, which he sees as surrendering to despair.
Among Binx's preoccupations along the course of the Search are repetitions and rotations. A repetition Binx defines as "the reenactment of past experience toward the end of isolating the time segment which as lapsed in order that it, the lapsed time, can be savored of itself and without the usual adulteration of events that clog time like peanuts in brittle." For example, he cites an ad in a magazine for Nivea Creme and recalls that he saw the same ad twenty years ago in a magazine on his father's desk. The events of the intervening twenty years were neutralized because Nivea Creme was exactly as it was before.
A rotation is "the experiencing of the new beyond the expectation of the experiencing of the new. For example, taking one's first trip to Taxco would not be a rotation, or no more than a very ordinary rotation; but getting lost on the way and discovering a hidden value would be." As long as Binx experiences these epiphanies he doesn't surrender to what he refers to as the malaise.
Binx pursues his newest secretary and they become amorous on a trip to the beach but she unequivocally establishes boundaries between them, one being a young man who will become her fiancée. Meanwhile, Binx accompanies Kate on her mental rollercoaster and proposes marriage. She dismisses him by emphasizing that she would not want her mental instability to ruin such a union but readdresses the subject later and agrees to the possibility that if he guides her and tells her what to do she will trust his guidance and that will provide a foundation for stability. He impulsively asks her to join him on a business trip to Chicago and she agrees. She has difficulties but Binx manages to guide her through the minefield until his aunt catches up with them and chastises him for taking her with him without informing anyone what had become of her, taking full advantage of the opportunity to deliver her 'what are you going to do with your life' lecture and asking him what he truly believes. Binx cannot answer.
At the novel's conclusion, Binx appears to accommodate both the expectations of society (and Aunt Emily) as well as the compulsions of his Search. We do not know how successful he and Kate will be but at least the collective pursuit of their individual searches may prevent succumbing to the depths of the malaise.
Binx's existential search recalls another fictional searcher, the narrator of Proust's 'In Search of Lost Time.' Marcel searches for lost time and occasionally finds it in the taste of a madeleine. Binx searches not for a holy grail but for the novelty of living. 'The Moviegoer' is similar in its preoccupation with conventional suburban culture to John Cheever's stories of quietly desperate New York businessmen and Richard Yates' tragic 'Revolutionary Road' (finalist for the 1962 National Book Award that 'The Moviegoer' won). Percy contributes the Old South version of this lifestyle and in turn influenced Richard Ford's 'The Sportswriter'.
'The Moviegoer' is, however, in a class by itself. In a sense it is a celebration of the hidden misfit. Binx is perhaps more subversive than most political radicals because he is outwardly a conformist, living a conventional life, observing the rituals of the middle class life and fulfilling society's expectations. Beneath the conservative exterior lurks a strange eccentric moviegoer categorizing the world, undergoing a search as existential as any Kafkaesque or Dostoevskian antihero.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 16, 2012Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThe existential crisis is timeless so the 50 years since Percy Walker wrote The Moviegoer don't matter. If you ignore some superficial differences, I am Binx Bolling.
You read The Moviegoer for comfort - you are reassured searching is common. But, it doesn't provide you with the answer to your search - it tries to get you to give up. As unattractive as Binx Bolling is to you, your search is that unattractive to others.
Is Binx's search real or is it an excuse? He could be tackling the hardest question or he could be using it as an excuse for his movie going and secretary chasing. The existential crisis is a perfect trap. The first step is the easiest - realizing many people are fooled into thinking their lives have meaning. Binx is quick to rejects other's beliefs - southern aristocracy or religion. Then the trap: He can deconstruct anything, but he has nothing to replace it with. If you can't find anything meaningful to do, you might as well enjoy a meaningless diversion.
So what is the answer to the search? Frankl flips the question around. "What can you expect from life?" becomes "What does life expect from you?" It is a clever way of saying quite the search; do work, help your fellow man. But life is generally good and easy, so it is easy to convince yourself that life expects very little.
Maybe the answer lies in relationships. Does the chaos of his relationships with his aunt and Kate prevent him from growth. Has being manipulated for so long prevented Binx from forming caring relationship. You get of glimpse of a human, caring Binx. As he cares for his step brothers and sisters you think there may be hope for him.
Binx's primary escape are movies. Today he would escape online. It is interesting to think about the differences. Binx's is attracted to the cinetography of movies - everything more beautiful, loves more intense, and the meaning is clear. The internet offers a different escape than movies. The internet lacks the script and direction of movies, but closer resembles reality and offers almost tactile fantasies - that your internet millions are just waiting for you.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 21, 2020Percy's a good writer as far as his prose and his descriptive abilities go but I can't for the life of me figure out what he's trying to get at here. His protagonist has some kind of vague existential dread that's never really fleshed out. He talks about "malaise" and "the everyday" and "everybody's dead", whatever it is causes him supposedly to lose any ambition to do anything, which he expresses by being an investments salesman and living in the suburbs. After a while the guy's free-floating and undefined dread gets to be a bit annoying. How many times can you listen to a guy explain his world view with "I don't know"? The best that Percy comes up with are some unhelpful vague philosophical allusions that are also a bit annoying. I think I hit my limit when the protagonist says about a student he meets, "He's definitely a moviegoer, even though he doesn't go to movies." Too much of a puzzle that I didn't feel compelling enough to try and solve. But there was one memorable passage I got a kick out of: "Though I do not know whether I am a liberal or a conservative, I am nevertheless enlivened by the hatred which one bears the other." That might be a good strategy for life these days.
Top reviews from other countries
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David RangelReviewed in Mexico on June 17, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
Excelente si te gustó el personaje, lo leí yo y posteriormente mi novia, a la cual el personaje principal no le causó tanta empatía. A mi me pareció excelente.
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CharlesReviewed in Spain on September 24, 2016
4.0 out of 5 stars Entretenida novela ambientada en Louisiana
Primera novela que leo del autor. Esta novela está considerada por muchos como un clásico de la literatura americana contemporánea. Ambientada en los parajes sureños de Louisiana, ofrece una visión de esa región y sus costumbres. El libro relata las andanzas y tejemanejes de un hombre que busca su sitio en la vida. Un libro llamativo y con pasajes de profundo interés por lo que a mi entender son enfoques diferentes de situaciones puntuales contidianas. Recomendable.
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in Japan on July 22, 2013
2.0 out of 5 stars It wasn't meant to be
I couldn't really understand the flow of the book until I read the end of it. So it was quite a frustrating experience for me but I might challenge it again after a year or two.
- julia doyleReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 5, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Unusual and well written
An interesting book, existentialist but also hopeful, which is rare in my experience. Well written, an objective stance taken but with a humanist slant, and quite touching. A good window onto its era, and the expiring previous social paradigm of Southern USA. A gem.
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Client d'AmazonReviewed in France on March 21, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Un roman fondamental.
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseWalker Percy, grande voix de la littérature du sud des États Unis a justement été récompensé pour ce roman.
Immense texte philosophique, complètement existentiel. Le personnage principal est très complexe et c'est ce qu'il nomme sa "quête " qui occupe le livre. Sa cousine, Kate, est, elle aussi très complexe et souvent bouleversante. C'est un roman qu'il faut lire et relire, un roman qui ne se livre pas entièrement à la première lecture, un roman qui peut vous accompagner tout au long de votre vie.