The Notebook

by

Nicholas Sparks

The Notebook Study Guide

Welcome to the LitCharts study guide on Nicholas Sparks's The Notebook. Created by the original team behind SparkNotes, LitCharts are the world's best literature guides.

Brief Biography of Nicholas Sparks

Born in Omaha, Nebraska, Nicholas Sparks and his family moved around the United States frequently as his father pursued graduate studies in Minnesota and California. After graduating as the valedictorian of Bella Vista High School in Fair Oaks, California, Sparks enrolled at the University of Notre Dame. Sparks graduated early after meeting the woman who would become his wife in 1988. Shortly thereafter, the two of them moved to New Bern, North Carolina—a place neither of them had ever been to. The town of New Bern would become the setting for Sparks’s first novel, The Notebook, which he wrote in his spare time while working in the pharmaceutical industry. Sparks was an undiscovered writer when he sold The Notebook for $1 million advance in 1996. The book hit The New York Times Best Seller list in its first week of publication, and Sparks’s career as a lauded writer of romance novels began. The author of over 20 novels (and 11 New York Times bestsellers) including A Walk to Remember, Nights in Rodanthe, and The Last Song, Sparks’s romantic books have been widely adapted into movies starring Rachel McAdams, Ryan Gosling, Miley Cyrus, Richard Gere, and numerous other lauded actors and actresses. As of 2020, Sparks is rumored to be working on a TV follow-up to the wildly successful film version of The Notebook.
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Historical Context of The Notebook

The main action of The Notebook is set in October of 1946—barely a year after the end of World War II. The lingering emotional effects of the war, and the Great Depression which preceded it, can be felt throughout the novel. Noah fights in Europe during the war (and loses his friend Fin to a torpedo while there) while Allie remains stateside and volunteers at a local hospital in Raleigh. Both Allie and Noah are traumatized by the horrors of war. Allie, who meets Lon while volunteering, retreats into a relationship with him in order to “dr[i]ve all her fears away” and numb herself to the pain she witnesses. Noah, meanwhile, throws himself into fixing up an old house as soon as he returns home from Europe, working day and night to distract himself from the old pain of missing Allie as well as the new traumas of witnessing so much loss and violence. When Noah and Allie reconnect in New Bern, Allie marvels at how strong Noah seems compared to the men “destroyed by war” she’s seen over the last several years—yet in spite of her observation that the world is “rushing forward [and] leaving behind the horrors of war,” Allie senses that forgetting the past too quickly, in spite of the sadness or “horrors” it might hold, is a dual-edged sword. Allie’s conflicting thoughts about leaving the past behind reflect accurately the sentiments with which many Americans struggled in the wake of World War II. The desire to move on, reinvigorate the economy, and get back to life as usual conflicted with people’s lingering traumas in the wake of the massive human rights violations and unprecedented losses of the Holocaust and the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Other Books Related to The Notebook

The Notebook is part of a long tradition of novels centered around an unlikely romance between two individuals from very different backgrounds. Drawing inspiration from romance novels about wealth, status, and class such as Jane Austen’s classics Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility, The Notebook offers a contemporary twist on a tale as old as time. Some other contemporary romance novels which engage similar issues of love, destiny, wealth, and class include Jojo Moyes’s Me Before You and even E.L. James’s Fifty Shades of Grey. The Notebook is also a unique romance novel because it focuses on two characters who are near the ends of their lives. Other romance novels which feature the tragic death of one (or both) of its central lovers, either due to illness or an accident, include John Green’s The Fault in Our Stars, Nicola Yoon’s Everything, Everything, and even two of Nicholas Sparks’s other novels, Nights in Rodanthe and Message in a Bottle. Throughout the novel, Noah makes repeated references to his favorite book, Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass, as well as poems by Alfred, Lord Tennyson and Sir Charles Sedley.
Key Facts about The Notebook
  • Full Title: The Notebook
  • When Written: 1990s
  • Where Written: New Bern, NC
  • When Published: 1996
  • Literary Period: Contemporary
  • Genre: Romance
  • Setting: New Bern, North Carolina
  • Climax: After reuniting with Noah and having sex with him, Allie learns that her fiancé, Lon, has come to New Bern to demand that Allie make a decision between him and Noah once and for all.
  • Antagonist: Anne Nelson; Lon Hammond, Jr.
  • Point of View: The Notebook alternates between Noah’s first-person account of his and Allie’s present-day lives in a North Carolina nursing home and limited third-person retrospectives from both his and Allie’s points of view.

Extra Credit for The Notebook

In-Laws in Love. Nicholas Sparks has stated that he was inspired to write The Notebook after finding himself feeling touched and moved by the love story of his wife’s grandparents. When Sparks first met them, they had been married for 60 years—and yet the depths of their enduring love for each other were, according to Sparks, awe-inspiring. Though Sparks took liberties with their story and invented the narrative of Noah and Allie on his own, meeting them is what motivated him to write a tale of a love that endured through the years as theirs had.