“I think even stupid people like to puzzle over a book. A slight element of mystery is a great asset.”
Willa Cather respects her
readers. I heard a radio interview with a novelist who talked about her latest
book as though it were a take-home exam and she was supplying the cheat-sheet.
Her book, she implied, was an equation to be balanced and thus exhausted. Good
books remain enduring enigmas. Who would presume to have wrung all the meaning out
of Death Comes for the Archbishop? Who would want to do so? Besides, a book
is not its “meaning” or “message.” I don’t read anything for answers,
especially fiction. Books are not puzzles to be solved, even Nabokov’s.
Cather is writing to her editor at Houghton Mifflin, Ferris Greenslet, on this date, November 26, in
1931. She refuses to write prefaces to her books:
“I’ve thought a good deal
about prefaces, Knopf suggested one for a certain book of his, and ‘'ve decided
not to write any more prefaces at all. They stimulate a temporary interest and
curiosity, but in the long run they are a mistake, for an author still living
and still working. I shall leave various comments on some of my books, out of
which you can make prefaces after my decease.”
Of course, Henry James
famously wrote prefaces for the New York Edition of his work, but no one has ever
read them as “keys” to unlock the novels and stories. They represent James’ thoughts
on the writing of fiction and endure as literature in their own right. “If the
writers of various novels I like had written prefaces to them,” Cather writes
to Greenslet, “it would rather spoil the books for me.” Cather likewise declined
to have her novels repackaged in “school editions” for students – a defense of
the autonomy of her work and, by implication, all of literature. She tells
Greenslet:
“It is too much like selling my own goods. One has to follow one's instinct in these matters, for that is the only guide one has.”
A very cool lady who seems to have suffered no fools. I believe I would have liked to have met her, but boy would you have to be on your toes.
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