William Maxwell writing to Sylvia Townsend Warner in February 1960:
“I am reading or was
reading the most deadly book about Yeats, by an American professor named
Richard Ellmann. No conversations, no anecdotes, no descriptions of what he wore
or had to eat. He could just as well have been a certified public accountant. No
astonishment.”
We could say Maxwell is
reacting like a novelist, certainly not like an academic. Or perhaps his
reaction is that of any dedicated reader. Ellmann’s first two books were
devoted to Yeats, and I don’t know which one Maxwell was reading. The only Ellmann
title I’ve read is his 1959 biography of James Joyce, an early specimen in the
overinflated, resolutely dull biography category. I remember it as a laborious
slog, ironic given that Ulysses bursts with comedy and felt life.
Maxwell speaks for the common reader, those of us who expect books to be vivid,
true to life, even exciting. In 1997, in his new introduction to The
Outermost Dream: Essays and Reviews (Graywolf Press), originally published
by Knopf in 1989, Maxwell writes:
“[W]hen I read for my own
enjoyment I cannot—or mostly do not—read authors whose way of writing doesn’t
give me pleasure. But of course style is not in itself enough. One wants
blowing through it at all times the breath, the pure astonishment of life.”
A capacity for astonishment
is not confined to any particular form or genre. It can be modest and muted, as
in a Chekhov story (“Gooseberries”), or exulting, as in a poem by Yeats (“All Soul’s Night”). In an April 1955 letter to Warner, Maxwell praises her like
this: “Do you know you have the most astonishing gift for bringing imaginary
houses to life?” In March 1977, the year before Warner’s death, he writes to
her: “But someday I shall astonish you as you astonish me every time I
get a letter from you.”
[The letters quoted are
from The Element of Lavishness: Letters of Sylvia Townsend Warner and
William Maxwell 1938-1978 (Counterpoint, 2001).]
If you don't know of it already, Patrick, check out www.fivebooks.com. Boatloads of interviews and reviews, often of five volumes at a time (hence the title of the blog).
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