Appropriately, the Quentin section, with an imminent suicide, treats time more thematically rather than stylistically. Like Benji, time haunts Quentin. He is trapped by his obsession with time. When I first wake up, I glance at my alarm clock. However, I do not look at the shadows on my floor to tell time like Quentin does. He breaks his watch, a present from his father, asks if it can be fixed, and then does not want it to be fixed. Quentin’s obsession with time points out two things: One, because of his constant awareness of time—everywhere is “full of ticking”—Quentin wants to escape it and therefore commits suicide. Symbolically, he breaks his watch to stop time. He does not get it fixed because he will not “need a watch” anymore (83, 84). Two, there is only so much time before Quentin’s life ends. The clock is ticking. Overall, Quentin may be more bogged down, feeling trapped, in past memories than Benji does only because he does resort to drastic measures. Unlike Benji, Quentin understands the motivations and effects of specific actions. To exacerbate the problem, Quentin’s father believes that time will tell. Certainly, time will tell.
*On a completely separate note, when I first started this book, I was frustrated with the Benji section. Now that we have started the Quentin section with its long slew of unpunctuated paragraphs, interrupted sentences, and use of italics, the Benji section seemed much easier to understand. But I guess I will have to wait until the next section to see what I really think of Quentin’s. (508)