A Small, Good Thing

by

Raymond Carver

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The Baker Character Analysis

Ann Weiss orders her son Scotty’s birthday cake from the baker. He is an older man, and he’s polite yet abrupt and uninterested in small talk when taking Ann’s order. When Ann fails to pick up the cake on the morning of Scotty’s birthday, the baker begins to call the Weisses’ home repeatedly, becoming increasingly rude and cryptic on the phone. This odd behavior is a result of the baker’s anger and loneliness. Unbeknownst to him, though, Ann and Howard are also angry and lonely, having just lost their son in a tragic car accident on the morning of his birthday. The baker is ultimately able to sympathize with the couple when they come to the bakery and tell him about Scotty’s death, and he’s surprisingly compassionate despite his earlier behavior. He explains that he’s childless and lonely, having spent decades baking wedding and birthday cakes for other people without hitting certain life milestones himself. Through sharing their mutual sadness, the Weisses and the baker come to understand each other, and the three of them spend the night talking and eating fresh bread in the bakery. Eating, the baker tells the couple, is “a small, good thing” to appreciate during trying times. The baker’s character is a testament to how tragedy can bring people together, as well as how meaningful small gestures of kindness can be in the midst of tragedy.

The Baker Quotes in A Small, Good Thing

The A Small, Good Thing quotes below are all either spoken by The Baker or refer to The Baker. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Joy and Tragedy Theme Icon
).
A Small, Good Thing Quotes

She was a mother and thirty-three years old, and it seemed to her that everyone, especially someone the baker’s age—a man old enough to be her father—must have children who’d gone through this special time of cakes and birthday parties. There must be that between them, she thought. But he was abrupt with her—not rude, just abrupt. She gave up trying to make friends with him.

Related Characters: Ann Weiss, Scotty Weiss, The Baker
Related Symbols: Birthday Cake
Page Number: 402
Explanation and Analysis:

“He’s all right,” the doctor said. “Nothing to shout about, he could be better, I think. But he’s all right. Still, I wish he’d wake up. He should wake up pretty soon.” The doctor looked at the boy again. “We’ll know some more in a couple of hours, after the results of a few more tests are in. But he’s all right, believe me, except for the hairline fracture of the skull. He does have that.”

Related Characters: Dr. Francis (speaker), Ann Weiss, Howard Weiss, Scotty Weiss, The Baker
Page Number: 407
Explanation and Analysis:

She wanted to talk more with these people who were in the same kind of waiting she was in. She was afraid, and they were afraid. They had that in common. She would have liked to have said something else about the accident, told them more about Scotty, that it had happened on the day of his birthday, Monday, and that he was still unconscious. Yet she didn’t know how to begin. She stood looking at them without saying anything more.

Related Characters: Ann Weiss (speaker), Scotty Weiss, The Baker, Franklin , Franklin’s Family
Page Number: 414
Explanation and Analysis:

Then he began to talk. They listened carefully. Although they were tired and in anguish, they listened to what the baker had to say. They nodded when the baker began to speak of loneliness, and of the sense of doubt and limitation that had come to him in his middle years. He told them what it was like to be childless all these years. To repeat the days with the ovens endlessly full and endlessly empty. The party food, the celebrations he’d worked over. Icing knuckle-deep. The tiny wedding couples stuck into cakes. Hundreds of them, no, thousands by now. Birthdays. Just imagine all those candles burning.

Related Characters: Ann Weiss, Howard Weiss, Scotty Weiss, The Baker, Dr. Francis
Related Symbols: Birthday Cake, Phone Calls
Page Number: 425
Explanation and Analysis:
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A Small, Good Thing PDF

The Baker Quotes in A Small, Good Thing

The A Small, Good Thing quotes below are all either spoken by The Baker or refer to The Baker. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Joy and Tragedy Theme Icon
).
A Small, Good Thing Quotes

She was a mother and thirty-three years old, and it seemed to her that everyone, especially someone the baker’s age—a man old enough to be her father—must have children who’d gone through this special time of cakes and birthday parties. There must be that between them, she thought. But he was abrupt with her—not rude, just abrupt. She gave up trying to make friends with him.

Related Characters: Ann Weiss, Scotty Weiss, The Baker
Related Symbols: Birthday Cake
Page Number: 402
Explanation and Analysis:

“He’s all right,” the doctor said. “Nothing to shout about, he could be better, I think. But he’s all right. Still, I wish he’d wake up. He should wake up pretty soon.” The doctor looked at the boy again. “We’ll know some more in a couple of hours, after the results of a few more tests are in. But he’s all right, believe me, except for the hairline fracture of the skull. He does have that.”

Related Characters: Dr. Francis (speaker), Ann Weiss, Howard Weiss, Scotty Weiss, The Baker
Page Number: 407
Explanation and Analysis:

She wanted to talk more with these people who were in the same kind of waiting she was in. She was afraid, and they were afraid. They had that in common. She would have liked to have said something else about the accident, told them more about Scotty, that it had happened on the day of his birthday, Monday, and that he was still unconscious. Yet she didn’t know how to begin. She stood looking at them without saying anything more.

Related Characters: Ann Weiss (speaker), Scotty Weiss, The Baker, Franklin , Franklin’s Family
Page Number: 414
Explanation and Analysis:

Then he began to talk. They listened carefully. Although they were tired and in anguish, they listened to what the baker had to say. They nodded when the baker began to speak of loneliness, and of the sense of doubt and limitation that had come to him in his middle years. He told them what it was like to be childless all these years. To repeat the days with the ovens endlessly full and endlessly empty. The party food, the celebrations he’d worked over. Icing knuckle-deep. The tiny wedding couples stuck into cakes. Hundreds of them, no, thousands by now. Birthdays. Just imagine all those candles burning.

Related Characters: Ann Weiss, Howard Weiss, Scotty Weiss, The Baker, Dr. Francis
Related Symbols: Birthday Cake, Phone Calls
Page Number: 425
Explanation and Analysis: