The OED defines “to touch (also hit, reach) bottom” as “to reach the lowest or worst
point.” In the passage above, Evan S. Connell adjusts the idiom a little. In
his sense, to touch bottom with a writer’s work is to exhaust it, to ascertain his
intentions and all the connotations, often on first reading. Nothing’s left. You
can’t return to it and expect something new. This is always the case with so-called
genre fiction and, in fact, with most of the books published any given year. Read
a Hemingway story or a novel by Toni Morrison and you’ve already plumbed the
ocean floor. The best writers solve nothing. They pose more questions than
answers and write not so much to be read as to be read a second time and more.
Connell (1924-2013)
rarely gave interviews. In literary terms, he seems to have belonged to that
race described by Melville as “isolatoes.” Marketing his work held little interest
for him. He appears hardnosed and anti-romantic when it comes to writers and the
writing life. He never taught, never married or had children and lived a life
monkishly devoted to writing. In the interview quoted above, given to The Transatlantic Review in 1976, he is
asked to describe his “work habits,” and says: “I work essentially a
nine-to-five day, seven days a week, and then take off when I can't stand it
any more.” Later in the same interview, asked if he could distill what he
wanted to “get across” in his work, Connell replies: “No.”
Connell is one
of the rare recent American writers whose body of work I’ve read in its entirety.
Between 1957 and 2008 he published twenty remarkably varied volumes, and their
overall impact was to baffle critics. I reread several of them fairly often but two meet Connell’s untouched-bottom (sounds salacious, doesn’t it?) criteria:
in fiction, Mrs. Bridge (1959); nonfiction, Son of
the Morning Star (1984). Asked which writers he respects, Connell says:
“Chekhov,
Tolstoy, Mann, and I have considerable respect for de Maupassant; even though
he's not that deep, he had a great technical facility for producing the effect
he wanted.”
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