“[T]here are never enough books of the kind one likes . . .”
We’re driven by a sense of cultural obligation to read certain books: “I must have a
go at the Waverley novels.” We might even feel compelled to go slumming: “Dashiell
Hammett was a commie but . . .” Guilt, too, is an effective motivator: “Where’s
my never-opened copy of Proust?” And don't forget plain old gut-bucket snobbery:
“I really must tell the boys at the bowling alley about Sylvia Plath.”
In his 1975 Paris Review interview, Kingsley Amis is
asked if having grown up as an only child had an impact on him becoming a
writer.”[W]riting for me,” he replies, “is to a large extent self-entertainment,
and the only child is driven to do that.” His answer seems commonsensical, even
for those of us with siblings. The notion of the canon has been fashionably
discredited but every serious reader carries around his own canon of essential
books. Classics, yes, with the inevitable Shakespeare and Tolstoy, but don't leave out the idiosyncratic standards like Nabokov,
Liebling, J.V. Cunningham and Guy Davenport. That vital core requires no
critical defense. It can’t be challenged. It’s what remains when snobbery and
even taste are left on the shelf. Those are the sorts of books Amis is talking
about, and they would include his own Lucky
Jim. He continues in the interview:
“And as for
reading, well of course I got a lot done, Again, totally heterogeneous
material—what we would now call very bad literature: the boys’ comics of those
days—which were, of course, compared with today’s comics, positively Flaubertian
in their style and Dickensian in their character portrayal—all the way up
through hardbound books of adventure stories and such, and taking in real
writers like Dickens himself, Shakespeare and so on, in much the same sort of spirit.
I think it’s very important to read widely and in a wide spectrum of merit and
ambition on the part of the writer.”
Across a lifetime,
reading is a continuum. True readers are motivated by a selfish quest for
pleasure, which can mean many things and almost certainly will evolve with time.
No one starts or continues reading because it’s an onerous waste of time. The
linkage of reading and writing is intimate and obvious to some of us, including
Amis:
“I read
somewhere recently somebody saying, ‘When I want to read a book, I write one.’
I think that’s very good. It puts its finger on it, because there are never
enough books of the kind one likes: one adds to the stock for one’s own entertainment.”
In a 1968
interview with Book World, Amis said:
“You could probably isolate certain common qualities in the writers I like best—wit,
energy, a way of saying something with style and economy. This is really why I
started writing; I wrote Lucky Jim because I wished that I hadn’t finished
reading all the books like it. I’d read all of Waugh and Powell and said, ‘Where’s
more? We’ll have to do some ourselves.’”
Amis died on
this date, October 22, in 1995 at age seventy-three.
[The
transcripts of both interviews can be found in Conversations with Kingsley Amis (ed. Thomas DiPietro, University
Press of Mississippi, 2009.)]
2 comments:
There's good taste, bad taste, and MY taste, and it dictates that you'll have to pry H. Rider Haggard out of my cold, dead hands.
Thomas Parker, when I read your comment I'd just a moment before been rereading the middle book of Haggard's Zulu trilogy, Child of Storm. No doubt you know it well.
I had a good correspondence in the months before his death with the librarian and author of a book on the Varangian Guard, Benedikt Benedikz, who told me of his collection of (I think it was) 52 Rider Haggard books.
C. S. Lewis relished Haggard and wished someone would reprint them all so could get them, and he wished Haggard had written a romance on the Wandering Jew.
Dale Nelson
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