“Certain
writers inspire affection in their readers that cannot be explained either by
their work or by the facts of their lives. It proceeds from some temperamental
undercurrent, some invisible connection between the writer and the reader that
is more available to the senses and the emotions than to the mind.”
The notable
word is “affection.” More than mere acquaintance, not quite love, certainly not
passion. One easily feels affection for children not one’s own, and for cats
and other animals. Affection suggests fondness, tenderness, warmth. It’s
spontaneous, never calculated, difficult to feign convincingly, easily
sentimentalized. There’s something almost passive about affection. It happens, and one can’t make it happen
(rather like love). Howard Moss in “Notes on Fiction” (Minor Monuments,1986) identifies an important and rarely recognized
relation between writers and serious readers. Across a lifetime of reading, a
handful of writers become trusted companions whose company we depend on. We even
confide in them. Moss continues:
“Bookish
affections of this kind are deceptive and irrelevant, yet they truly exist. For
me, Colette, Keats, and Chekhov inspire affection. Faulkner, Shelley, and Ibsen
do not.”
Moss, a poet
and longtime poetry editor of The New
Yorker, is wrong. Such things are neither deceptive nor irrelevant. Readers
live for such relationships. For me, Dr. Johnson, A.J. Liebling and Philip
Larkin inspire affection. So do Chekhov and Daniel Fuchs. Pope, Joyce and Frost
do not, though I admire their work.
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