64 pages • 2 hours read
Hernan DiazA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides that feature detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, quotes, and essay topics.
Bevel wields his enormous wealth to bend the world to his will. His manipulations fall into two categories: manipulation of the stock market and manipulation of his public image. He does this in multiple realms: He manipulates the stock market to his advantage; he effectively destroys Vanner and his book Bonds, pulping all copies and erasing Vanner from the records of the New York Public Library; and he hires Partenza to fabricate his life story. More than just spinning public opinion in Bevel’s favor, these combined efforts alter reality itself, changing what’s true/disturbing people’s ability to determine truth.
Bevel gives Partenza a candid, boastful description of his job: “My job is about being right. Always. If I’m ever wrong, I must make use of all my means and resources to bend and align reality according to my mistake so that it ceases to be a mistake” (266). Right and wrong have a double meaning here. The first meaning concerns being correct or incorrect: He makes an inaccurate prediction about the market and then uses his power to reshape the market to his prediction.
Bevel frames his alignment of reality as a moral imperative: Rather than distorting, his wealth corrects reality. “Alignment” denotes correction in both the moral and economic sense, as if in aligning reality Bevel believes he’s righting a wrong.
Featured Collections