“Like every other form of art, literature is no more and nothing less than a matter of life and death.”
Depending on
who says it, that’s the sort of thing that sounds pompous and bloated with
self-importance, or obvious and wise. For some of us, literature is a mortal
matter, not a hobby. I was speaking recently with an acquaintance roughly my
age who retired some years ago. She told me she has never regretted the
decision but added, “You’ve got to have a hobby, something to keep you busy.
Otherwise, you’ll go nuts.” If that’s the case, I’m screwed. Not since I was a
kid have I had anything resembling a hobby. Even then it was more of a passing “phase,”
like puberty. Reading and writing are what I do, but I’ve never thought of them
as a proxy form of collecting stamps.
The author
of the quoted sentence above is Mavis Gallant, in her 1982 essay “What is
Style?” (Paris Notebooks: Essays and
Reviews, 1987). Gallant (1922-2014) was a Canadian-born author of excellent
short stories and two novels who lived for most of her life in France. I remembered
Gallant’s essay while reading, yet again, Tolstoy’s stories. “Father Sergius”
and “Master and Man” always get to me. There’s nothing hobby-like in regularly returning
to them. Even in translation, these stories seem stripped to essentials, though
not in a highly stylized minimalist sense. You might almost say these stories
have no style, but even that is misleading. Plainness can be as self-conscious
and distractingly attention-seeking as a flamboyant style. Gallant writes:
“[L]et me
say what style is not: it is not a last-minute addition to prose, a charming
and universal slipcover, a coat of paint used to mask the failings of a
structure. Style is inseparable from structure, part of the conformation of
whatever the author has to say. What he says – this is what fiction is about –
is that something is taking place and that nothing lasts. Against the sustained
tick of a watch, fiction takes the measure of a life, a season, a look
exchanged, the turning point, desire as brief as a dream, the grief and terror
that after childhood we cease to express. The lie, the look, the grief are
without permanence. The watch continues to tick where the story stops.”
She might be
talking about “Master and Man.” Here is the passage that immediately follows the
sentence quoted at the top. It seems to echo the repeated references William
Maxwell, Gallant’s editor at The New
Yorker, made to the essential quality in all the best fiction – “the breath
of life”:
“The only
question worth asking about a story – or a poem, or a piece of sculpture, or a
new concert hall – is, ‘Is it dead or alive?’ If a work of art needs to be
coaxed into life, it is better scrapped and forgotten.”
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