The End of the Novel is Odd
The scene in which the narrator must burn the contents of his briefcase in order to get out of the dark basement – finds enlightenment, perhaps you could say, is an interesting way to conclude that part of the book. As readers, we could all probably see that the objects building up in the narrator’s briefcase weren’t going to amount to nothing, especially with the deep symbolic significance of each of them, as well as the trouble the narrator had letting go of them. For a briefcase for which he ran into a burning building for no reason but that it had been with him through everything so far, the burning of (most of) its contents was a surprisingly quiet ending. There were no more speeches or declarations, just the narrator quietly, privately, letting go. It seemed as if the narrator’s detachment from the world as set up by his reflections on invisibility, was continuing. Of course, as soon as the narrator discovers that Jack wrote the note telling the narrator that there were...