I can’t say I have stuck to that promise completely. I’m sure I have stood in front of students and made pronouncements about the lack of quality of Stephen King, a writer I have never been able to get through; and then there’s Anne Rice: impenetrable stuff--to me. But clearly there are many people, including some I highly respect, who love King and Rice. Go figure.
What brought this to mind was my recent reading of The Killing Floor, the first Jack Reacher novel by Lee Childs. At first it was mildly interesting as the characters were developed, along with plot and setting. But it didn’t take long before I realized I knew exactly where this novel was going; I could have outlined the entire plot after reading the first chapters. The prose lay like cold noodles in front of me. The Jack Reacher at the end of the novel is exactly the same as he was at the beginning. I finished the novel, although I only scanned the last few chapters. What made this stand out so much for me was the next book I picked up: Travels with My Aunt by Graham Greene. The difference was evident within the first few pages: Greene’s prose can only be described as luminous, his characters vivid and unexpectedly eccentric, his mastery of detail was exquisite, the settings unique, and the plot unpredictable. And the main character, Henry Pulling, is noticeably changed by the end of the novel: “I have escaped,” he says, meaning his whole previous life is behind him as he moves on into uncharted territory. Reading Greene was like standing in the mountains on a sunny day, feeling a cool breeze and hearing the tumbling of a nearby stream--after standing in the dry and vacant desert of the previous book. The experience was liberating.
There’s no way one can classify literature as good or bad or so-so without making someone unhappy. And I can be rather a snob about the whole process--on the grounds that teaching literature for 26 years gives me some insight. So I will continue to make judgments based on my years of reading and learning and studying works of literature. You are welcome to disagree with me. I sometimes disagree with myself: I hated Pride and Prejudice when I read it as an undergrad, but rereading it a few months ago I found it brilliant.
In the final analysis literary judgment is subjective and, while I have my opinions, I have to accept that others, including others whom I respect, have differing views. I fall back on my 65 or so years of reading, but I understand everyone won’t agree with me. I can live with that.
I love your writing and how you think! I learn a lot from reading your blog posts. (I'll have to check out Greene's book after reading your review.) You do have a Way With Words!!
ReplyDeleteThanks you! I wish I had more discipline to to these blogs a bit more often--or even regularly. But it's nice of you to read them regularly. I appreciate it.
ReplyDeleteThis stands out to me in your criticism of The Killing Floor:
ReplyDeleteThe Jack Reacher at the end of the novel is exactly the same as he was at the beginning.
Could that not be read as a modern (as in mid-century modern, like the furniture style) take on existentialist ennui as the only possible trajectory of a novel if it is to be relevant to our current lifestyle?
Or would you argue that the novel as an art form was never intended to reflect the banal, mundane aspects of the unexceptional protagonists who can never rise to the level of hero because of their tame and tepid trajectory?