“You often blog about rereading
books, sometimes many times. Those are the kind of books I’m interested in.”
A list of rereadable books
is by definition idiosyncratic, even strange and off-putting. I read A.J. Liebling’s Between
Meals: An Appetite for Paris (1962) every year but shelve the title in precisely
one canon: my own. That’s the nature of serious reading. It’s fair to assume that
all dedicated readers will get around to Dante, Shakespeare and Proust. Beyond that,
the field is pretty much wide-open. In Conversations with William Maxwell (ed. Barbara
Burkhardt, 2012), the novelist tells an interviewer his favorite writers when
he was young were Yeats, Edwin Arlington Robinson, E.E. Cummings, Elinor Wylie
and Walter de la Mare – an idiosyncratic, interesting and respectable list, though I have a feeling thousands of well-read people have little or no familiarity with at least several of those names. Maxwell goes on:
“Then I settled down mostly
to fiction. I spent two years reading hardly anything but Colette. Another two
years with Elizabeth Bowen. Then Hardy. Forster. Turgenev, Tolstoy, and
Chekhov. James. When I finished Tolstoy’s Master and Man, and came to
the description of the dead horse with his mouth full of snow, I felt like
getting down on my knees to Tolstoy. It struck me as close to the center of
existence as it is possible to come in writing. Nabokov, also, two years. It
wasn’t so much that I got something from them, though of course I did, as that
they were the company I chose to keep at that time.”
I’ve read only four
writers in the way Maxwell describes – that is, through exclusive immersion in
their work: Shakespeare, Austen, Melville and Henry James. All of them I reread with some regularity – Shakespeare most often, Austen least. Would I recommend my
practice for my young reader or anyone else? Of course not. She’ll work out her
own way of doing things. It’s important not to be intimidated and not to assume
other readers know what they’re talking about. Develop readerly instincts,
learn to trust them and ignore literary fashions. In his essay “The Constant
Rereader’s Five-Foot Shelf” (Innocent Bystander: The Scene from the 70’s,
1975), L.E. Sissman encourages all of us, seasoned readers and tyros:
“A list of books that you
reread is like a clearing in the forest: a level, clean, well-lighted place
where you set down your burdens and set up your home, your identity, your
concerns, your continuity in a world that is at best indifferent, at worst
malign. Since you, the reader, are that hero of modern literature, the
existential loner, the smallest denominator of moral force, it behooves you to
take counsel, sustenance, and solace from the writers who have been writing
about you these hundred or five hundred years, to sequester yourself with their
books and read and reread them to get a fix on yourself and a purchase on the
world that will, with luck, like the house in the clearing, last you for life.”
Patrick,
ReplyDeleteIf you haven't done so already, you should give a listen to Ralph Richardson's Desert Island Discs over at the BBC Radio 4. It's delightful for so many reasons, (not least of which is listening to the mellifluous voices of e Richardson and Roy Plomley) but I think you'll be pleased by Sir Ralph's choice of reading material.
What interests me is the different effect a book has when reread at different times in one's life. I first read War and Peace as a young man over many nights, lying in my bunk on a U.S. Navy ship as the deck guns were firing overhead at enemy positions during the Vietnam War. Now as an old man I am rereading it in the peace and quiet of my home. Same book, same translation, but a very different experience.
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