“I have not ceased to read novels. Since my reading of contemporary novels has diminished almost to zero, I have again read most of the works of Dickens, Eliot, Peacock, Flaubert, Tolstoy, Stendhal, Dostoevsky, Turgenev, Couperus, Conrad, Wharton, Melville, James, and many other novelists of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.”
My
experience precisely (except for Peacock, whose work I have never read, and
Couperus, whom I had never heard of). The author is the sociologist Edward
Shils who was taking part in the symposium “Who Reads Novels?” published in the
Spring 1979 issue of The American Scholar.
I first realized I was no longer reading much contemporary fiction twenty
or twenty-five years ago. I still read novels and stories, which have always been central
to my understanding of literature, but mostly from the past, often books I first read when
quite young. As Shils puts it:
“I find that
to read once more books which I first read in high school and as an
undergraduate, and even as recently as twenty years ago, is almost the same as
reading them for the first time. They still fascinate me and give me very great
pleasure.”
I think age
is a factor, with its generalized sense of estrangement from contemporary
culture. Also, the growing prominence of so-called “genre fiction.” I don’t
read thrillers or science fiction. Neither do I read much that passes for “experimental”
or avant-garde fiction, which seems a tiresome dead end. The last Nobel Prize winner whose novels I read was V.S. Naipaul. Political correctness and fashionable sloganeering have
also corroded fiction. Perhaps writers are as distracted by other media as their readers. Put bluntly, I seldom encounter a new novel worthy of my time.
Still, this
change in custom nags at me. I have no desire to live in a cultural isolation
chamber or a self-satisfied state of fuddy-duddy-ism. I can’t get
self-righteous about the State of the Novel and I really don’t care what others
choose to read. My late friend David Myers had a goatish appetite for new
novels. I worried about him the way I might worry about a friend who gorges on
ice cream and candy.
The novel
and its enormous potential for giving readers, as Shils puts it, “an artistic
portrayal and an assessment of the course and problems of human life,” hasn’t
changed. Fewer novelists seem interested in such traditional literary roles. In
other words, novelists, not the novel, are the problem. Yes, there are a few
brave exceptions. Shils writes:
“A question
about the centrality of the novel is a judgment on those who are producing
novels today rather than on whether the novel is still an adequate genre for
the literary imagination. I think that it is – for those who are serious in
their desire to produce works of literary value and who have the imagination,
discipline, and verbal facility and sense to do so.”
Shils’ friend Joseph Epstein recently published The Novel, Who Needs It? In his final sentence Epstein answers the nicely cocky question posed by his title: “[T]he answer is that we all do, including even people who wouldn't think of reading novels--we all need it, and in this, the great age of distraction we may just need it more than ever before.”
Great insights on reading! I tend to mix contemporary fiction and non-fiction in with continual rereading of the classics. Rereading books I read in high school only leads to the realization that both my reading skills and fundamental, if limited, understanding of humanity has changed over the (many) years.
ReplyDeleteI'm continually being surprised by all the great new literary novels and novelists out there. Of course there are mountains of garbage. There always has been. The quality of young British authors is especially high right now. I share the tastes of our host and probably most of the readers here on Anecdotal Evidence. But I wouldn't trade all the pleasure I've gotten from 21st Century authors for anything. Go to the bookstore and take a flyer on something new.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of novelists few have heard of, I read a comment today from Robert Louis Stevenson (in his "The Art of Writing"), in which he says that, during some downtime, he read novels by the French novelist Fortune de Boisgobey (1821-1891),a man who was very popular in his time, with about 60 novels to his credit. His real name was Fortune Hippolyte Auguste Abraham-Dubois.
ReplyDeleteI would imagine that even most modern French readers have never heard of him! Fame is fleeting, indeed.
I agree with both James and Faze. Italo Calvino said somewhere that he balanced his reading diet 50-50 between classics and contemporary literature. Since learning of his approach some twenty years ago, I have alternated the work of living novelists with their dead forebears. Among other benefits, it has caused me to avoid ruts and stereotyping either constituency.
ReplyDeleteI also read non-fiction in the same braided manner, with fiction consumed in the evening and non-fiction at lunch/on breaks.
(While I am writing, thank you for this stimulating blog!)
-Fin