“We, whatever our current station on the span of three-score-and-ten, are ephemeral. Only make-believe people can endure for long; and some, like Hamlet, are permanent – at least until the sun burns out.”
A young
woman tells me she loves George Eliot but hadn’t, until recently, read her
final novel, Daniel Deronda. She was
moved to do so by an old post of mine, which means I’ve been doing something
right. The novels of the nineteenth century spoiled us and raised our expectations for
what fiction can do, which is why so many recent novels are disappointments.
I find the title character’s gradual realization of his Jewishness in Eliot’s
novel enormously moving. Deronda is my template or model for discovering one’s previously
unknown identity and, in a sense, for religious conversion. He had been
attracted to Jews and Judaism without knowing why. Deronda’s story is “real” to
me and more compelling than the lives of many people I’ve known in this
dimension – the real world.
I have no
interest in ontological dithering when it comes to fiction. I’m not embarrassed
to admit that fictional characters can be real (this time, no quotation marks).
Sophisticates may deny this but dedicated readers know better. Who would deny
the reality of Ralph Touchette and Natasha Rostov? Humans love stories. What
evolutionary advantage does this confer? Perhaps imaginative empathy, practice
for the real thing. What do strangers do when they meet, assuming they’re not
killing each other? Often, they swap stories. Characters are the delivery system for narratives.
Another
example: My favorite among all of Joseph Epstein’s stories is “Kaplan’s Big Deal” (The Goldin Boys, 1991). “Kaplan
was alone in the world,” he writes, “unconnected, responsible for himself only.”
And that’s his problem, though he's unaware of it at the start of the story. He’s a forty-five-year-old Pontiac dealer, a lifelong Chicagoan, without
a wife or kids but not on the make. He’s resigned but bored. He meets a French
woman, Françoise Berger, and her son, Phillipe. Spontaneously, seemingly out of
nowhere, Kaplan realizes he wishes to be a father, Philippe’s father.
I won’t give
away anything further. I first read “Kaplan’s Big Deal” when it was published in Commentary in 1989. Two years earlier the first of my three sons was born. To
this day, when I think of being a parent, the father of boys, the pain and exhilaration, I remember Kaplan
and the helplessly involuntary love he feels for Phillipe. Please read the
story and look at a model of what it means to be a father. There’s no
creepiness, no perverted motives, though the mother gives Kaplan copies of Death in Venice and Lolita as a sort of test.
The passage
quoted at the top is from Cynthia Ozick’s brief essay “Imaginary People,” collected
in Quarrel & Quandary (2000). She writes:
“Make-believe,
with its uselessness and triviality, with all its falseness, is nevertheless frequently
praised for telling the truth via lies. Such an observation seems plainly not
to the point. History seeks truth; philosophy seeks truth. They may get at it
far better than novels can. Novels are made for another purpose. They are made
to allow us to live, for a little time, another life; a life different from the
one we were ineluctably born into. Truth, if we can lay our hands on it, may or
may not confer freedom. Make-believe always does.”
1 comment:
"Another example: My favorite among all of Joseph Epstein’s stories is “Kaplan’s Big Deal” (The Goldin Boys, 1991)."
Excellent. I enjoy his essays, but will now delve into his fiction.
Thank you.
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