tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-49514866427319906752024-03-27T16:53:41.614-07:00CONTRA JAMES WOODthe emperor has no clothesEdmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.comBlogger49125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-54704535142838381022011-11-19T18:28:00.000-08:002011-11-20T10:45:07.796-08:00Christmas Comes Early<div><br /></div><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjoE5Lml6TygqfduF2EJSdDANPVT0T3MnmmByqprEATepQ785np9ntLHX9NPpORTnx5aWYty4ZKTBOh_AiJoQoapc3KbYp8w9yDgpowTPrbOoZAfFnP_p9WiIUnLNILXDFeI0_3He9EK5zC/s1600/PhotoFunia-efdd6f.jpg" onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 415px; height: 500px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjoE5Lml6TygqfduF2EJSdDANPVT0T3MnmmByqprEATepQ785np9ntLHX9NPpORTnx5aWYty4ZKTBOh_AiJoQoapc3KbYp8w9yDgpowTPrbOoZAfFnP_p9WiIUnLNILXDFeI0_3He9EK5zC/s400/PhotoFunia-efdd6f.jpg" border="0" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5676904253409955970" /></a><br /><div>James Wood tries to staunch the hemorrhaging of his critical reputation by making an ill-advised appearance in a comments thread at <a href="http://www.themillions.com/2011/11/the-disappointment-author-lethem-v-wood.html">The Millions</a>. I can just imagine the scene: pacing in his study in frantic, narrowing circles -- he's snapped at the housekeeper, Consuela, three times already today! If only Claire weren't off on that reading tour, she'd be there to stroke his forehead and hum him a lullaby. <i>Let it go, Jim, just let it go . . . </i></div><div><div><div><br /></div><div>But no. Here are some highlights.</div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" color: rgb(1, 1, 1); line-height: 19px; font-family:Georgia;font-size:13px;"><br /></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:Georgia;font-size:100%;color:#010101;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" line-height: 19px;font-size:13px;"><b>**********</b></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" color: rgb(1, 1, 1); line-height: 19px; font-family:Georgia;font-size:13px;"><br /></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" color: rgb(1, 1, 1); line-height: 19px; font-size:13px;"><b><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">JAMES WOOD </span></b><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">(1:07 pm on November 16, 2011):</span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" color: rgb(1, 1, 1); line-height: 19px; font-family:Georgia;font-size:13px;"><div class="commenttext" style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 10px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; color: rgb(1, 1, 1); font: normal normal normal 13px/normal Georgia; line-height: 19px; "><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"> . . . Contemporary writers Wood has written about and praised, in detail, since arriving at The New Yorker in 2007, are: J.M. Coetzee, Jose Saramago, John Wray, Hari Kunzru, Peter Carey, Joseph O’Neill, Rivka Galchen, Jean-Christophe Valtat, Ismail Kadare, Teju Cole, Rana Dasgupta, Lydia Davis, Laszlo Krasznahorkai, Geoff Dyer, Ben Lerner. Some of these writers are “realists,” I guess, and others (Lerner, Davis, Krasznahorkai) are not, exactly. Outside The New Yorker, Wood has also written in praise of David Means, Edward St.Aubyn, David Bezmozgis. Writers written about negatively: Paul Auster, Richard Powers, Chang-Rae Lee, A.S. Byatt. I guess, by your logic, the writers written about appreciatively must be “classics,” and the ones written about negatively “more adventurous,” since Wood can only write appreciatively about Flaubert?</span></p><p style="text-align: center;margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><b>**********</b></span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><b><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">EDMOND CALDWELL </span></b><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">(1:07 pm on Nov. 17, 2011):</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" ;font-family:georgia;">As those Harvard lads at n+1 once wrote, “Poor James Wood”! Getting publicly dissed by 2 authors he’s reviewed has got to be the best thing that’s happened to <a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2010/01/birth-of-literary-fiction-from-spirit.html">Jiminy Critic </a>in quite a while — people are actually talking about him again! Sure, we all knew that a review signed with his name would still appear at infrequent intervals in the pages of the New Yorker, but we’d assumed they were from among his posthumous papers… But now everyone dusts off their pros and contras and joins the fray . . . and then Jiminy himself hops in! Yet the peevish epistle to his “lazy” detractors carries a plaintive subtext — please, somebody, read me!</span></p><div class="commenttext" style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 10px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; color: rgb(1, 1, 1); font: normal normal normal 13px/normal Georgia; line-height: 19px; "><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">And speaking of lazy, how many times has Jiminy (or one of his back-channeled seconds) produced a<a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2009/03/magic-beans.html"> list</a> of author names to demonstrate the ostensibly ecumenical range of his sensibility! Of course, he does so because it works — on lazy readers. All you have to do is study the reviews with a critical eye and you’ll see that what comrade Steven Augustine has written above is eminently the case, that these are “neoconservative attempt[s] to reduce the wild infinities of Literary Imagination to a prim, dull park in front of a luxury high-rise…”</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">The question, as always, is not which authors JW approves, but how, in what manner, he reads them in order to arrive at his approval. Take a look for example at his recent <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/atlarge/2011/07/04/110704crat_atlarge_wood">essay</a> on Krasznahorkai. Behind the baffled, size-queen admiration for the Hungarian’s long sentences, the review comes down to three key assertions about Krasznahorkai’s novels: they’re basically realist, they’re basically novels of consciousness (of War & War he makes the deeply banal point that the novel ‘gets us into the head of a madman,’ etc.), and they basically address metaphysical concerns.</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">Of course the novels do almost exactly the opposite — their baroque sentences explode the spurious metaphysic of “individual consciousness” in the materialist excess of language itself, deeply unsettling any notion of “reality” by dramatizing so-called reality’s always-ideological constructedness (rather than, say, its “quiddity” or “lifeness”). But we can’t have that now, can we? It’s simply too demoralizing for the professional-managerial class. So in comes Jiminy in his Hazmat suit (otherwise known as his “style”) to house-train those unruly sentences.</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">You can see the same kind of revanchist domestication at work in his reviews of <a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2009/01/gutless-realism-james-woods-housebroken.html">Bolaño</a> and <a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2008/12/james-and-giant-sentence.html">Saramago</a>. Yes, by all means, read his reviews!</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><br /></span></p><p style="text-align: center;margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><b>**********</b></span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><b><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">JAMES WOOD </span></b><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"> (10:24 pm on Nov. 17, 2011):</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">It might be useful to quote some passages from my review of Laszlo Krasznahorkai, so that readers can decide for themselves whether Edmund Coldwell’s description of it as some kind of sinister neo-con recuperation seems accurate. Remember, Coldwell claims that I characterize Krasznahorkai as 1)basically a realist; 2) basically interested in what he calls the spurious metaphysic of individual consciousness; and 3) basically metaphysical. Here, then, are a few passages, chosen from the beginning, middle, and end of my piece (which appeared in May in The New Yorker):</span></p><li id="comment-25364" style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; list-style-type: none; list-style-position: initial; list-style-image: initial; "><div class="commenttext" style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 10px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; color: rgb(1, 1, 1); font: normal normal normal 13px/normal Georgia; line-height: 19px; "><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">“It is often hard to know exactly what Krasznahorkai’s characters are thinking, because this author’s fictional world hangs on the edge of a revelation that never quite comes.”</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">“The prose has about it a kind of self-correcting shuffle, as if something were genuinely being worked out, and yet, painfully and humorously, the self-corrections never result in the correct answer… Krasznahorkai pushes the long sentence to its furthest extreme, miring it in a thick, recalcitrant atmosphere, a kind of dynamic paralysis in which the mind turns over and over to no obvious effect.”</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">“But the abysses in Krasznahorkai are bottomless and not logical. Krasznahorkai often deliberately obscures the referent, so that we have no idea what is motivating the fictions: reading him is a little like seeing a group of people standing in a circle in a town square, apparently warming their hands at a fire, only to discover, as one gets closer, that there is no fire, and that they are gathered around nothing at all.”</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">“The ‘said Korin’ tag inevitably slips into the implied ‘wrote Korin.’ Reading, saying, writing, thinking and inventing are all mixed up in Korin’s mind, and inevitably get mixed up in the reader’s mind, too.”</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">“Resembling, in form, Beckett’s Texts for Nothing, Krasznahorkai’s words often seem like a kind of commentary on late Beckett – there is a steady emphasis on nothingness, entrapment, going on and being unable to go on. In the fifth text, which accompanies the picture of the dog leaping at the man contentedly reading a newspaper, the beast seems to have become the Other, everything that threatens that bourgeois contentment – an immigrant perhaps, a terrorist, a revolutionary, or just the feared stranger.”</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">“Krasznahorkai is clearly fascinated by apocalypse, by broken revelation, indecipherable messages. To be always “on the threshold of some decisive perception” is as natural to a Krasznahorkai character as thinking about God is to a Dostoevsky character; the Krasznahorkai world is a Dostoevskian one from which God has been removed.”</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">“But this kind of summary does no justice to the unfathomable strangeness of this novel.”</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">“It is unclear whether the whale really had anything to do with the irrruption of violence; Krasznahorkai mischievously dangles the possibility that the circus is a difficult artwork, that it was simply misread by everyone as an agent of apocalypse, in the way that all revolutionary and obscure artworks are misread (by implication, this novel included). Obviously, the whale is some kind of funny, gloomy allusion to Melville, and perhaps Hobbes: like the leviathan, like Moby-Dick, it is vast, inscrutable, terrifying, capable of generating multiple readings. But it is static, dead, immobile, and the Puritan God who makes Melville’s theology comprehensible (however incomprehensible Melville’s white whale is) has long vanished from this nightmarish town in the shadow of the Carpathians. Meaning scrambles for traction, and the sinister doorless truck which sits silently in the middle of the town square is also a joke about the Trojan horse: naturally, in Krasznahorkai’s world, the Trojan horse is empty. No one gets out of it.”</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">I don’t know about you, but this doesn’t sound an awful lot like, say Robert Stone or John Updike or Richard Ford; it doesn’t sound much like the spurious metaphysic of individual consciousness (sounds to me like almost the opposite — all those bottomless abysses and obscured referents!); and though broken revelations and unfulfilled apocalypses and a vast Melvillean whale that is like an empty Trojan Horse could of course be seen as a metaphysics of sorts, it’s certainly a negative metaphysics, “signifying nothing.”</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">Oh well, read the review for yourself and make your own mind up. But not, of course, if you belong to the “professional-managerial class.” If that’s your unhappy fate, get your Hazmat suit on, and hold fast to the spurious metaphysic of your individuality…</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><br /></span></p><p style="text-align: center;margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><b>**********</b></span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><b>EDMOND CALDWELL </b>(2:24 on Nov. 18, 2011):</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">Jiminy Critic has two definitions of realism, one for the kind he doesn’t like, and a broader one (“lifeness,” “truthiness,” etc.) for the kind he likes. The kind he doesn’t like is the narrow adherence to conventional narrative techniques such as one finds in the works of Robert Stone, Richard Ford, or John Updike (although, oddly, he’ll often approve some perfectly pedestrian authors who practice the same thing, such as <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2010/02/15/100215crbo_books_wood">Jonathan Dee</a> or <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2008/04/07/080407crbo_books_wood">Richard Price</a>, but we’ll leave that for another time). The kind he likes, the higher or deeper realism of “lifeness,” communicates what Jiminy sees as the core of “real” human experience (individual consciousness) without any narrow fidelity to a particular style. Whenever Jiminy likes a writer’s work, he assigns it to this higher or deeper realism-of-consciousness (even if he has to ignore or misrepresent the work to do so). He wrote a whole book – or at least a collection of fragments published as a book – outlining his understanding of this mode of realism as “lifeness.” Yet whenever anyone charges Jiminy with advocating realism, he has this trick of immediately confining his understanding to the narrow kind, so that he can disavow it, just as he does in this comments thread.</span></p><li class="alt" id="comment-25365" style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; list-style-type: none; list-style-position: initial; list-style-image: initial; "><div class="commenttext" style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 10px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; color: rgb(1, 1, 1); font: normal normal normal 13px/normal Georgia; line-height: 19px; "><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" ;font-family:georgia;">In the Laszlo Krasznahorkai review Jiminy makes the distinction between the two kinds of realism and assigns LK to the latter kind. LK is among those writers of “experimental fiction” who eschew “a merely grammatical realism, whereby the real is made to fall into approved units and packets.” Jiminy continues, in a passage that he somehow forgot to include above in his selection of self-exculpating quotes: “In fact, these writers could be called realists, of a kind. But the reality that many of them are interested in is ‘reality examined to the point of madness’.” A little earlier, he talks about how these writers deploy the long sentence, emptying it of much of the content of more narrow, conventional realism and instead “concentrat[ing] on filling the sentence, using it to notate and reproduce the tiniest qualifications, hesitations, intermittences, affirmations and negations of being alive.” Ah – being alive! Here is the whole desideratum of Jiminy Critic, his approved units and packets of warmed-over<a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2008/12/function-of-humanism-at-present-time.html"> humanism</a>, which have been consistent since the essays in The Broken Estate – realism, lifeness (the idea if not yet the insipid term), consciousness. Does it really need to be said that consciousness is still consciousness, even if it’s a deranged or “mad” consciousness, a consciousness under duress?</span></p><div class="commenttext" style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 10px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; color: rgb(1, 1, 1); font: normal normal normal 13px/normal Georgia; line-height: 19px; "><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">Here’s a phenomenon you’ll often observe in freshman literature classes: whenever a story or a novel offers anything strange, disturbing, or uncanny, many students’ first reaction is to assimilate it back into the familiar. Gregor Samsa’s metamorphosis has to be a dream, or proof that he had gone insane. Jonathan Culler, following Barthes, calls this practice the naturalizing or recuperating of “writerly” texts, typically achieved by assigning a controlling consciousness to every utterance. Consciousness, in all cases, must be primary, writing secondary, the effect of a prior cause. You can read an excerpt from Culler which almost reads as an anticipatory critique of How Fiction Works by following this <a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2008/12/jonathan-culler-reviews-how-fiction.html">link</a>.</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" ;font-family:georgia;">Laszlo Krasznahorkai’s novels are very much writerly texts, and Jiminy’s whole effort is to make them into readerly texts. Jiminy writes, “It is often hard to know exactly what Krasznahorkai’s characters are thinking, because his fictional world teeters on the edge of a revelation that never quite comes”; instead of such a revelation, we get “a dynamic paralysis in which the mind turns over and over to no obvious effect.” It might be hard to know what the characters are thinking, what the ultimate effect of that thinking should be, but at least there are characters thinking, a mind turning over thoughts. There’s never a sense, in Jiminy’s review, that the “characters” are, say, being “thought” by those lava flows of language; that writing itself might be primary and constitutive. There always must be this stabilizing, prior presence of consciousness – the metaphysic of “the soul” that informs all of Jiminy Critic’s reviewing.</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">Of a quote from LK’s novel War & War, Jiminy writes, “the entire passage, even those elements which seem anchored in objective fact, has the quality of hallucination. One senses that Korin spends all his time either manically talking to other people or manically talking to himself, and that there may not be an important difference between the two.” If there’s something contradictory or strange in the text, we can chalk it up to a hallucinating mind, which is still, after all, a mind. Again: “reading, saying, writing, thinking, and inventing are all mixed up in Korin’s mind, and inevitably get mixed up in the reader’s mind, too.” For Jiminy, War & War is what he elsewhere lauds as a “novel of consciousness,” even if consciousness gone mad.</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">Thus we reach the thudding bathos of Jiminy’s climax: “By the end of the novel, I felt that I had got as close as literature could possibly take me to the inhabiting of another person, and, in particular, a mind in the grip of ‘war and war’ – a mind not without visions of beauty but also one that is utterly lost in its own boiling, incommunicable fictions…” Actually, by the end of the novel it is made plain that Korin is just an effect of writing, that there is no way out of language’s constitutive power. Jiminy’s trivial reading – that the novel gets you into the head of a madman – is the ultimate recuperation. Jiminy banally speculates that the manuscript in Korin’s possession does not really exist in the world of the novel, that it is Korin’s “mental fiction.” But Korin doesn’t possesses the manuscript because the manuscript (and writing in general) possesses him.</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">Towards the end of the essay Jiminy shifts into talking about the metaphysical, because all really good novels are ultimately “about” metaphysical concerns rather than, say, exemplars of materialist ones (and chiefly, in the case of many practitioners of the baroque sentence, the materiality of writing itself). Of the illustrated novella Animalinside he asserts, “by the end of this relentless text, the dog has passed through the political and become metaphysical or theological” – often, by sheer coincidence, the trajectory of many a Jiminy Critic review. Jiminy pretends in this comments thread that the term “metaphysical” has to entail a belief in God, and since he’s only pointing to what he sees as a God-sized hole in Melancholy of Resistance (“a book about a God that not only failed but didn’t even turn up for the exam”), he can’t be accused of yet again going all metaphysical on us. But here Jiminy is just relying on the ignorance of his preferred brand of reader; privately he knows better (later even conceding that it might be an “negative metaphysics” he’s pointing to).</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">The slide from the political to the metaphysical is typical of Jiminy’s reviews, and his reading of Melancholy of Resistance takes place under its sign. In his construal, the novel “takes repeated ironic shots at the possibility of revolution” (always a high recommendation!) and therefore segues perfectly into his (again typical) quietist conclusion: “Mental fictions may enrage us, and may lead to madness, but they may also provide the only ‘resistance’ available. Korin, Valuska, and Mrs. Eszter are, in their different ways, all demented seekers after purity. That they cannot exactly describe or enact their private Edens makes those internal worlds not less but more beautiful. Inevitably, as for all of us but perhaps more acutely for them, ‘heaven is sad’.” Ah yes, yet another novel that ultimately counsels resignation (with a little poignant inner “resistance” in one’s holy consciousness) in the face of a world that cannot be changed.</span></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 10px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;">Jiminy can point to all the “bottomless abysses and obscure referents” and name-dropping of Beckett and Bernhard that he likes – it’s misdirection, drawing attention to the curtains and wallpaper and the upholstery – never let it be said that Jiminy Critic is not an accomplished upholsterer! – rather than to the foundations of his own review. Those foundations are the same as always: realism, the novel of consciousness, metaphysics, quietism.</span></p></div><p></p></div></li></div></li></div><p></p></div></span></div></div></div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-31589845707683477822011-11-07T19:21:00.001-08:002011-11-07T19:29:49.591-08:00Eclipse<div><br /></div><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhMLrLdkCmbrbvzL-P7s9wdLSXC70wmOqHniX5ZGSWIkY2M56HaFyPL4I96t_sArNFwcOW8rqpTdije2AxTigGkBnK6oZb0tkOjBR48z6VeoZi3O0SruylPzjUiIK939P6eNBy9lHp4-w9b/s1600/roadkill.jpg" onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 500px; height: 323px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhMLrLdkCmbrbvzL-P7s9wdLSXC70wmOqHniX5ZGSWIkY2M56HaFyPL4I96t_sArNFwcOW8rqpTdije2AxTigGkBnK6oZb0tkOjBR48z6VeoZi3O0SruylPzjUiIK939P6eNBy9lHp4-w9b/s400/roadkill.jpg" border="0" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5672459969822456050" /></a><i><br /></i><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: rgb(34, 34, 34); line-height: 20px; "><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;">"I’d have taken a much worse evaluation from Wood than I got, if it had seemed precise and upstanding. I wanted to learn something about my work. Instead I learned about Wood."</span></span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;"> </span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;"><br /></span></span></div><div style="text-align: right;"><span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space:pre"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;"> </span></span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;">- Jonathan Lethem's </span></span><a href="http://lareviewofbooks.org/post/12467824780/my-disappointment-critic"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;">essay</span></span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;"> on being reviewed by James Wood</span></span></div><div style="text-align: right;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: rgb(1, 1, 1); "><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 15px; padding-left: 0px; line-height: 20px; "><strong style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; "><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;">TM:</span></span></i></strong><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;"> So did you read the James Wood review up to the very end?</span></span></i></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 15px; padding-left: 0px; line-height: 20px; "><strong style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; "><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;">AH:</span></span></i></strong><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;"> I did. But actually, when he got to the bit when he was imagining how I might write something, it just seemed so pathetic that I stopped taking it seriously.</span></span></i></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 15px; padding-left: 0px; line-height: 20px; "><strong style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; "><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;">TM:</span></span></i></strong><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;"> When he did the parody of you?</span></span></i></p><p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 15px; padding-left: 0px; line-height: 20px; "><strong style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; "><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;">AH:</span></span></i></strong><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;"> Yes, it’s very ill-advised to do something like that, I think. It exposes your own fear of the charge that you don’t know what you’re talking about.</span></span></i></p></span></div><div style="text-align: right;"><span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space:pre"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;"> </span></span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;">- Allan Hollinghurst <a href="http://www.themillions.com/2011/11/the-millions-interview-alan-hollinghurst-answers-his-critics.html">answers</a> his reviewers</span></span></div><div style="text-align: right;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;"><br /></span></span></div><div style="text-align: right;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;"> </span></span></div><div><br /></div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-22498021139741927332010-08-26T19:23:00.000-07:002010-08-26T19:50:44.240-07:00Dept of Filthy Neocon Litcritter Lies<div></div><span><span>I'm taking the liberty of reposting in its entirety <a href="http://staugustine2.wordpress.com/2010/07/08/the-endless-thread-7-0/#comment-3752">this</a> concise exposé of kultur-kaiser Adam Kirsch by Steven Augustine from <i>The Endless Thread</i>. Kirsch belongs to the same sub-genre of "critic" as James Wood -- smarmy-smart, facile propagandists of the empire's cultural bureau for "higher-toned" readers from the professional-managerial class (Jed Perl's another one). Kirsch recently wrote a couple of know-nothing <a href="http://www.tnr.com/article/books/the-deadly-jester">take</a>-<a href="http://www.tnr.com/article/books-and-arts/76531/slavoj-zizek-philosophy-gandhi">downs</a> of Slavoj Zizek in which he condemned the Slovenian philosopher/provocateur for being "fatally attracted to violence." These were published in the <i>New Republic</i>, a magazine psychopathically attracted to violence.</span></span><div><br /></div><div><span><span></span></span>Here's comrade Augustine's piece:<br /><div><br /></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; color: rgb(74, 74, 73); line-height: 17px; "><p style="font-size: 1em; line-height: 1.5em; margin-top: 1.2em; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 1.2em; margin-left: 0px; "><i>Like all his fellow Neocons, Adam Kirsch scores his points by lying; the techniques he prefers are creepy sleight-of-hand, or the 20th-Century propagandist’s sadistic favorite, which is to assert, with a wink, that Blue is Red or a Cow is a Butterfly or that a Fundamentalist Guerrilla and a Secular Dictatorship are chummy together (for example). It only works if you aren’t paying attention… or if you really want to believe.</i></p><p style="font-size: 1em; line-height: 1.5em; margin-top: 1.2em; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 1.2em; margin-left: 0px; "><i>In his eulogy to Frank Kermode, the mendacious Adam quotes a review Kermode wrote about a collection of essays by Martin Amis. Kirsch would have the reader believe that Kermode’s introduction to his review of “The War Against Cliché” is a quietly devastating put-down:</i></p><p style="font-size: 1em; line-height: 1.5em; margin-top: 1.2em; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 1.2em; margin-left: 0px; "><i>(</i><a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2265191/" rel="nofollow" style="color: rgb(73, 124, 167); "><i>http://www.slate.com/id/2265191/</i></a><i>)</i></p><blockquote style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 20px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 20px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 20px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 20px; border-left-width: 4px; border-left-style: solid; border-left-color: rgb(136, 134, 133); "><p style="font-size: 1em; line-height: 1.5em; margin-top: 1.2em; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 1.2em; margin-left: 0px; "><i>“The last book he published before he died was Bury Place Papers, a collection of his LRB essays, which shows that he was a tough and witty critic as well as a learned one. His review of Martin Amis’s essay collection The War Against Cliché is a master class in quiet devastation: “The main title of this collection may at first seem wantonly non-descriptive, but it turns out to be exact,” Kermode begins. “The first thing to see to if you want to write well is to avoid doing bad writing, used thinking. The more positive requirements can be left till later, if only a little later.” It takes a minute to realize that Kermode’s verdict on Amis has just been delivered and that there will be no appeal.”</i></p></blockquote><p style="font-size: 1em; line-height: 1.5em; margin-top: 1.2em; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 1.2em; margin-left: 0px; "><strong><i>From the review, by Kermode, Kirsch quotes:</i></strong></p><blockquote style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 20px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 20px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 20px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 20px; border-left-width: 4px; border-left-style: solid; border-left-color: rgb(136, 134, 133); "><p style="font-size: 1em; line-height: 1.5em; margin-top: 1.2em; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 1.2em; margin-left: 0px; "><i>(</i><a href="http://www.lrb.co.uk/v23/n09/frank-kermode/nutmegged" rel="nofollow" style="color: rgb(73, 124, 167); "><i>http://www.lrb.co.uk/v23/n09/frank-kermode/nutmegged</i></a><i>)</i></p><p style="font-size: 1em; line-height: 1.5em; margin-top: 1.2em; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 1.2em; margin-left: 0px; "><i>“That said, or, as Amis allows himself to say, ‘simply put’, we have here a literary critic of startling power, a post-literary-critical critic who, incorrigibly satirical, goes directly to work on the book. Often, being right and being funny are, in this book, aspects of the same sentence. Often, as one reads on, one finds oneself quietly giggling, or gigglingly quiet. The precision of the attack is astounding, and is matched by the bluntness of the condemnation.”</i></p></blockquote><p style="font-size: 1em; line-height: 1.5em; margin-top: 1.2em; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 1.2em; margin-left: 0px; "><strong><i>or this:</i></strong></p><blockquote style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 20px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 20px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 20px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 20px; border-left-width: 4px; border-left-style: solid; border-left-color: rgb(136, 134, 133); "><p style="font-size: 1em; line-height: 1.5em; margin-top: 1.2em; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 1.2em; margin-left: 0px; "><i>“The long central New Yorker essay on Larkin is probably the most considered and the most permanently valuable part of the book. It recycles some earlier remarks to great defensive effect. More than any other piece it confirms one’s opinion that Amis is the best practitioner-critic of our day – just what Pritchett was in his prime, though without the bad punctuation and the jangling train-wrecks.”</i></p></blockquote><p style="font-size: 1em; line-height: 1.5em; margin-top: 1.2em; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 1.2em; margin-left: 0px; "><i>Seems, strangely, like very strong praise, doesn’t it? Well I’m afraid you’ll have to keep reading it, again and again, until it doesn’t.</i></p><p style="font-size: 1em; line-height: 1.5em; margin-top: 1.2em; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 1.2em; margin-left: 0px; "><i>Neil Bush 2012.</i></p></span></div></div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-23198762672019241572010-08-09T14:56:00.000-07:002010-08-09T15:00:04.321-07:00Fiction Ain't All The New Yorker Domesticates<div><br /></div><div>From the blog "<a href="http://amapofthecountry.wordpress.com/">Have a Good Time</a>," an insightful <a href="http://amapofthecountry.wordpress.com/2010/07/28/what-the-new-yorker-doesn’t%C2%A0publish/">post</a> entitled "What the New Yorker doesn't publish":</div><div><br /></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: Verdana, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; color: rgb(51, 51, 51); line-height: 17px; "><div class="storycontent"><div class="snap_preview"><p><i>For starters, this letter:</i></p><blockquote><p><i>To the Editor,</i></p><p><i>While I was glad to see praising reviews of poets Rae Armantrout and Anne Carson in recent issues, I was somewhat disturbed by their contents. </i><a href="http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2010/05/17/100517crbo_books_chiasson" style="color: rgb(82, 117, 154); text-decoration: none; "><i>Dan Chiasson says</i></a><i> that Armantrout is the “best poet of the [Language] group” because she “takes the basic premises of Language writing somewhere they were never intended to go.” This ideological attack on experimental writing is repeated in</i><a href="http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2010/07/12/100712crbo_books_orourke" style="color: rgb(82, 117, 154); text-decoration: none; "><i> Meghan O’Rourke’s review of Carson’s “Nox,”</i></a><i> when O’Rourke says that Carson’s “singular gift” is complicated by “a postmodern habit of pastiche and fragmentation,” which O’Rourke calls “so much formal detritus.” Not all critics have to be behind Language poetry or formal experimentation, but to praise a Language poet and a formal experimenter for all they do that isn’t subsumed by those categories is a shockingly brazen party-line statement of what is and is not acceptable in poetry.</i></p></blockquote><p><i>It’s no surprise that a reviewer unsympathetic to Language poetry would only find praiseworthy the least Language-like elements in Armantrout’s work, nor is it surprising that a reviewer unsympathetic to formal experimentation would only care for Carson as a traditional lyric poet. What is surprising, and troubling, is that the New Yorker would print what amount to polemics against Language poetry and experimental writing in the form of reviews that pick out their outliers for praise. And in drawing the line where they do, excluding most Language poetry and experimental writing, the New Yorker obviously also excludes (for example) explicitly political poetry or poetry by people of color, which receive even less critical attention.</i></p><p><i>This is obviously not as important as the New Yorker failing to cover, say, Gaza* (</i><a href="http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/newsdesk/2010/06/lawrence-wright-on-gaza.html" style="color: rgb(82, 117, 154); text-decoration: none; "><i>nothing in the print edition since a shocking Lawrence Wright article in November 2009</i></a><i>–which might be worse than not covering it at all–and very little before then); and that in turn is obviously less important than the actual situation in Gaza. But the very rare and selective eye towards poetry reflects the same deep ideological biases as the Gaza coverage. Similarly, the New Yorker‘s poetry predilections are mere instances of the broader biases of Official Verse Culture, which themselves only reflect more pernicious forces of reaction and white supremacy. Perhaps I am overstating, but for me at least, the New Yorker has a profound role as an arbiter and definer of culture and politics. Presenting the ideological as neutral, even as it is of course ideology’s oldest trick, must be resisted!</i></p><h6><i>* Nothing on Oscar Grant. Nothing on SB 1070. Two brief stories on Sean Bell, one </i><a href="http://www.newyorker.com/talk/2008/03/17/080317ta_talk_collins" style="color: rgb(82, 117, 154); text-decoration: none; "><i>making fun of how black people speak</i></a><i>, and one round-up of </i><a href="http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/notebook/2008/05/19/080519gonb_GOAT_notebook_frerejones" style="color: rgb(82, 117, 154); text-decoration: none; "><i>musicians’ responses</i></a><i>. These kinds of stories on Sean Bell are emblematic: the New Yorker casts attention away from police violence making language and political music the real story.</i></h6><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:78%;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: 7px;"><b><i><br /></i></b></span></span></div></div></div></span></div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-59949409051903860572010-08-02T12:34:00.000-07:002010-08-02T12:40:36.366-07:00Aberrations<div>from an <a href="http://www.3quarksdaily.com/3quarksdaily/2010/08/in-search-of-historys-most-innovative-fiction-colin-marshall-talks-to-historian-of-the-novel-steven-.html">interview</a> with Steven Moore, author of <i>The Novel: An Alternative History</i>, at <i>3 Quarks Daily</i>:</div><div><br /></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: Times, serif; font-size: 14px; line-height: 20px; "><strong><i>What about the earliest fictions you include in the book fascinate you the most?</i></strong><i><br /><br />The daring of them. This goes back to your first question about alternative fiction. These early fictions, especially Egyptian and Assyrian stuff, they're almost like avant-garde magical realist novels. They're more like García Marquez than John Updike, say. The freedom I saw there really interests me. This is the same freedom avant-garde writers adopt. As soon as literature started becoming written, critics came up with rules for poetry and drama. Anyone who was writing tales or longer fictions were pretty much free to do whatever they wanted. There was this real spirit of experimentalism, to use a modern term, in that early fiction, that fit in perfectly with my whole thesis: the avant-garde novel is not a modern aberration, but goes all the way back to the beginning. If anything, the conventional novel is the aberration. That's a very late development.<br /><br /></i><strong><i>Could you say that we have it backwards, that what we see as normal is one current of many in terms of the way the novel has gone? We've focused so much on one subset, that has seemed to us to be the only thing?</i></strong><i><br /><br />Exactly. Without question, it's the most popular form of fiction, the conventional novel, the beginning, middle, end, and all that. It's the easiest to read, has the largest appeal, blah, blah, blah. But when you step back and look at the whole stream from ancient Egypt to what's being written now, it's just a tributary that goes off to the side. I wouldn't push it too hard, but the experimental novel is actually the main river. The conventional novel is a popular sidetrack.</i></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:Times, serif;font-size:130%;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: 14px; line-height: 20px;"><br /></span></span></div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-44051759895477210212010-07-28T19:01:00.000-07:002010-07-28T22:34:15.121-07:00The Erudite Mr. Wood, Part Deux<div><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjzhs1Hqc5NuduwGzpfBPiGh7tXEiI-K1LMpGycqSyb3D7K2J5jtn9BGaaw6_TV8VQy-FxBB8SoCHl2_v6Rf24j8fiAEQ4yFGQJsSphTJi0ShyP1zCpt0XQ-ddnJlsOmQbORCtXQKxondS_/s1600/JamesWoodAutoParkSign2.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 307px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjzhs1Hqc5NuduwGzpfBPiGh7tXEiI-K1LMpGycqSyb3D7K2J5jtn9BGaaw6_TV8VQy-FxBB8SoCHl2_v6Rf24j8fiAEQ4yFGQJsSphTJi0ShyP1zCpt0XQ-ddnJlsOmQbORCtXQKxondS_/s400/JamesWoodAutoParkSign2.jpg" border="0" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5499162550851084930" /></a><div style="text-align: center;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">Would you buy a <a href="http://www.jameswood.com/">used car</a> from this critic</span></i>?</div><!--StartFragment--> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Nigel Wood has done us the service of directing our attention to a </span><a href="http://www.amazon.com/review/R2WN6N74R519DV/ref=cm_cd_pg_oldest?ie=UTF8&cdPage=1&asin=0375752633&store=books&cdSort=newest#wasThisHelpful"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">continuation</span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> of Hershel Parker’s remarks at Amazon.com on James Wood and the Melville chapter of </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">The Broken Estate</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">, the first part of which I had cited in my previous </span><a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2010/07/erudite-mr-wood.html"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">post</span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> as a challenge to Wood’s reputation for deep and wide “learning” or "erudition." I repost the entirety of the continuation here, followed by my response.</span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Parker writes:</span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><i> </i><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" line-height: 16px; font-family:verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">In what I posted earlier on James Wood I did not mention what he had said of me in the 17 March 1997 New Republic and, somewhat revised, in The Broken Estate. In the New Republic he had begun with a subtle insult: mine was a "semi-biography"--not because it was half fiction or half essay but because it was the first volume. And I was "not a critic" but merely "a connoisseur of facts."</span></i></span></span></span></p><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" line-height: 16px; font-family:verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">According to Wood, I had confessed that in writing this "biography" (or "semi-biography"?) I had assembled documents chronologically in my computer then "simply moved chunks of the Log from one computer file to the other," not bothering to construct a single sentence of prose of my own. This is, let me say, false. I made no such confession. The only time I moved chunks of the Log into the biography was to avoid retyping something I was going to quote. I was saving effort and trying not to introduce new errors.<br /><br />Then Wood charged that I quoted "from almost every published contemporary review of Melville's novels." Now, I take some pride in having searched for many months, all told, since 1962, for unknown reviews and having publishing most of the known reviews, with the help of Brian Higgins, in the Cambridge Herman Melville: The Contemporary Reviews, but I had been selective in quoting in the biography. Wood complained that I had filled "twelve pages with reviews of Omoo" but had almost neglected to describe or interpret the book. My view is that the reviews of Omoo that came to the attention of Melville's publishers and his friends and family were important--indeed, they were crucial. If they had not been favorable, he and Elizabeth Shaw could not have announced their engagement and proceeded with plans for marriage, and Melville could not have confidently embarked on Mardi. Then, the reviews by Horace Greeley and G. W. Peck came just in time to sour the mood of the wedding. Finally, in 1849 Richard Bentley would not have taken a chance on Mardi if the English reviews of Omoo had not been favorable. I could not tell the story without the reviews.<br /><br />As for not describing the book, in Ch. 12, "Beachcomber and Whaler, 1842-1843," I had told what was known of Melville on Tahiti and Eimeo, drawing on old sources and two previously unpublished sources, one passed on to me from Wilson Heflin's papers and one in the 1878 Shaker Manifesto, discovered by Rita Gollin but not yet used in a biography.<br /><br />In Ch. 23, "Winning Elizabeth Shaw and Winning the Harpers," I had reviewed what scholars had shown about the sourcebooks for Omoo, focusing on the way he "used, misused, and downright abused his sources."<br /><br />Now I see that, deluding myself that I was a critic, I had devoted a substantial paragraph to one "of the characteristics of his mature style," Melville's "powerful portrayal of images from different times and places which alternate rapidly in the mind, merge with each other, and (in later examples) disentangle again. In Pierre and in Clarel, he made profound use of this psychological phenomenon, but it appears in most of its essentials in Omoo."<br /><br />I see that I had also devoted most of a page to describing "Melville's new command of language, particularly in the way his descriptions of events and actions were now saturated with the Scriptures." You would have thought that Wood would have liked that paragraph on Melville's use of the Bible, since in 2006 he wrote the passage I quoted in my earlier initial comment: "Melville's words muster their associations, their deep histories, on every page. There are scores of allusions to the King James Bible."<br /><br />Indeed, there are scores of allusions to the King James Bible in Moby-Dick. Therefore I would have thought that Wood might have been intrigued by my concluding that Omoo was "saturated with the Scriptures." He ought to have liked my conclusion that some readers would enjoy the evidence that Melville's brain was "Bible-soaked," even while his use of the Bible would offend "many pious people who kept a wary eye out for the use of God's word in vain, and who would find such submerged allusions blasphemous." Melville was taking a risk, I said.<br /><br />A decade and a half after writing the passage, I look at my concluding paragraph on the composition of Omoo with delight and pride. I had been delicately humorous about the sexuality in Omoo, demonstrating Melville's own adeptness at sexual innuendo in describing how a stranger in Tahiti should have his knife in readiness and his caster slung. In a parenthetical exclamation Melville had identified Mr. Bell, the husband of the infinitely desirable Mrs. Bell, as "happy dog!" That term was loaded. Melville had passed on to the publisher John Wiley the review in which the Times of London had said this about him: "Enviable Herman! A happier dog it is impossible to imagine than Herman in the Typee Valley." I laugh aloud now, in reading, after this space of time, my summation of the successful author and lover: "Meanwhile, his knife in readiness and his caster slung, there were hours when it was impossible to imagine a happier dog than Herman in the Hudson Valley." At the moment I wrote that, I must have been in my modest way a "happy dog." I did well by Omoo, take it all in all.<br /></span></i></span><p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" line-height: 16px; font-family:verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">Melville, Wood charged, was "tied down by Parker's Lilliputian facts." Nevertheless, it was "at least a fine family chronicle." Then Wood abandoned my "semi-biography" for rhapsodical excursions of his own. Midway, he recollected me long enough to slap me into the dirt before snatching me halfway up, his mighty fist clutching my shirt: "His [Melville's] reading, which had been eager but arbitrary, now took on a systematic wildness. Here, Parker, with his dribbling data, is useful." The slapping down is in the "dribbling," and the jerking up comes fast in the assertion that the data is "useful." Useful, if one paid a little attention, but my dates of Melville's reading, for instance, got mixed up in Wood's mind. Far, far into theological rhapsodies in the New Republic, Wood remembered me again: "Parker is right to call Moby-Dick "the most daring and prolonged aesthetic adventure that had ever been conducted in the hemisphere in the English language." Then Wood was swept up and away with his metaphysical effusions. Well, what was the New Republic paying him for? for reviewing a book fairly and conscientiously or writing a dazzling critical essay which he could collect in The Broken Estate?</span></i></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> </span></i></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: center;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">*******</span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Wood’s criticism of Parker’s biography is not original – in fact it is the standard knock against it. Wood needn’t have so much as touched the cover of one of its volumes to write what he did about it (although the tone of jeering superiority is all Wood’s); he is most likely just passing on what he read elsewhere, all too happy if readers who don’t know any better take the insight as yet more evidence of his critical brilliance. Yet in spite of having </span></span><s><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">too many notes</span></span></s><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> too many </span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Oomo</span></i></span></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> reviews, Parker’s biography has succeeded in becoming a standard, crucial reference for anyone writing seriously (as opposed to journalistically) about Melville.</span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">No, Wood’s criticism of the Melville biography tells us more about Wood himself than it does about Parker – and this is why we should be grateful to Nigel for bringing it to our attention. It fits into a pattern that surfaces whenever Wood writes about other critics, or at least those – George Steiner, Edmund Wilson, Harold Bloom, and even Parker – who might, whatever their flaws, limits, or excesses, genuinely merit the rhetorical bouquets of “erudite” and “learned” so regularly strewn in Wood’s path. In one way or another, Wood arraigns them all for the crime of </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">knowing too much</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">. </span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Take for instance Wood’s deeply nasty (yet ultimately trivial) </span><a href="http://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/1996/12/topplingthemonument/"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">hatchet-job</span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> on George Steiner. It opens with a number of substantial paragraphs ridiculing the occasionally pretentious ways that the older critic has of displaying his breadth of reference and allusion. To give just one example: Steiner’s “habitual tic,” Wood writes, “is a consumer’s definite article. Just as one asks for a coffee, a Coke, a scotch, Steiner asks for 'a Socrates, a Mozart, a Gauss or a Galileo…'” Wood sets him straight: “There is ‘a coffee,’ but there is no such thing as ‘a Mozart’. There is Mozart, singular and nontransferable—a concretion, not a vapor.” </span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">(Amusingly, Wood has had recourse to this proscribed rhetorical device himself, as in his </span><a href="http://store.nplusonemag.com/product/n-1-issue-no-3-reality-principle"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">epistle</span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> to the wayward lads at </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">n+1</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">: “I like best to lose myself in the rich prose of a Bellow or a Melville or a Henry Green…” </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">A</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> Melville, Mr. Wood? Pardon me, but there is simply no such thing. There is Melville, singular and nontransferable—or non</span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">redundant</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">, if you prefer…)</span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">It goes unsaid by Wood that it is possible to read pages and pages of Steiner without encountering such rhetorical excesses, and the pages themselves – for instance from </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Tolstoy or Dostoevsky: An Essay in Contrast</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">, from his useful introduction on Heidegger, from his book on translation, </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">After Babel</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">, and from essays on Homer, Shakespeare, Thomas Bernhard, Kafka, Lukacs, Brecht, Schoenberg, and on topics as disparate as literary pornography and the Holocaust (and this represents only a small portion of his work) – render the excesses, when they do appear, minor and forgivable. But like a true contemporary media pundit Wood relies more on his audience’s ignorance of his subject than their knowledge of it; from its first word to its last the essay is devoted to construing a whole ugly man out of a few warts.</span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Wood’s </span><a href="http://www.powells.com/review/2005_09_22.html"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">essay</span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> on Edmund Wilson – who wrote for the </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">New Republic</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> back when it was staffed by humans – is far more generous (Wilson was safely dead, after all, and Marty Peretz didn’t have a hit out on him). Yet when it comes to Wilson’s erudition the underlying message is strikingly similar. Speaking of Wilson’s “exhaustive and sometimes exhausting scholarship,” Wood writes:</span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Wilson's method was likewise to eschew the fragmentary, to strive for integration, and it is both a strength and a weakness in his work . . . He seems to rear panoptically above his subjects, like a statue overseeing a city square, sternly, anciently surveying the busy activity, compressing and elucidating vast amounts of mobile information. John Berryman joked that whenever one met Wilson he was always "working his way through the oeuvre" of some writer or other. His letters become rather wearisome to read because of his need to whale his correspondents with his learning; as someone in the Goncourt journals remarks about a minor French writer, "Yes, yes, he has talent, but he doesn't know how to make people forgive him for having it."</span></span></i></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">[ . . . ]</span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">What [Wilson] wrote about Michelet, in To the Finland Station, can also be applied to himself: "The impression he makes on us is quite different from that of the ordinary modern scholar who has specialized in some narrowly delimited subject and gotten it up in a graduate school: we feel that Michelet has read all the books, been to look at all the monuments and pictures, interviewed personally all the authorities, and explored all the libraries and archives of Europe; and that he has it all under his hat." Occasionally one wishes that Wilson would keep his hat on.</span></span></i></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Oddly, although Wood speaks of this pedantry as a weakness of Wilson’s “work” – clearly implying his publications – the only examples he musters are from the letters (see the </span><a href="http://www.powells.com/review/2005_09_22.html"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">review</span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> itself for the text I clipped). I personally can’t remember </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Axel’s Castle, To the Finland Station, Patriotic Gore,</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> or </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">The Wound and the Bow</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> being marred by “too many notes,” but that’s just me.</span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Later in the essay – Wood just can’t let it go – he adds, “There is something very moving about Wilson’s independence, his erotic curiosity for knowledge – though the conquistador of knowledge, bedding one fact after another, becomes tiresome after a while.” This defty combines Wood's defensiveness about Wilson’s erudition with a bourgeois moralist’s sniff at the latter’s robust sexual appetite, suggesting that in the presence of such a figure Wood feels castrated.</span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">It's one of Wood’s most unintentionally funny essays, not least because it is so transparent that when he points up Wilson’s ostensible flaws, the ideally "correct" critical model he has in mind is – himself: Wilson didn’t do enough close readings, wasn’t attentive enough to style (“</span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">it is hard to find any sustained analysis of deep literary beauty in his work</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">”), and, needless to say, shouldn't have been a Marxist. Other than that and the stuff about knowing and fucking too much, though, he was a great critic.</span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">And then there’s Harold Bloom, another figure who, in spite of having become a windbag in his dotage, might actually be considered “erudite.” Wood’s Bloom-envy comes in two alluring scents, Poisoned Kiss and Daggers Drawn, so you can take your pick. His review of </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">, included in </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">The Broken Estate</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">, opens: “Harold Bloom has been so abundant, so voracious with texts (more than twenty books, five hundred introductions), that it sometimes seems that he has kidnapped the whole of English literature and has been releasing his hostages, one by one, over a lifetime, on his own spirited terms.” As a toast it’s equivocal, the kind of praise that has you wondering the next day if you hadn’t also been slyly insulted. Wood indeed goes on to criticize Bloom for being overly rushed and repetitive in parts of the impressive oeuvre, but at this point in their relationship he is willing to be charitable: “[Bloom's] weaknesses, of which he is doubtless aware, are merely the gases emitted by an overwhelming and natural energy. That is the cost of combustion, and it is combustion that interests us…” By the time Wood comes to write his </span><a href="http://www.powells.com/review/2006_05_11.html"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">review</span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> of </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Jesus and Yahweh: The Names Divine</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">, however, the Bloom is off the rose, and the gaseous emissions have become uneuphemistic farts: </span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in;mso-pagination:none;mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">There have been twelve books since 1990, which means a book roughly every sixteen months . . . The only way to conduct this kind of permanent revolution of print is to have the word factories ablaze all day and night, and to relish the inevitable duplication and mass production . . . An extraordinary amount of the work of the last decade is luxurious with padding and superfluity; there is hardly a book of his that would not have been better off as an essay. He is not a critic anymore, but a populist appreciator; the close readings of poems, sometimes thrilling in their originality, that characterized books such as </span></span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">The Anxiety of Influence</span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> and </span></span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Agon</span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> have been replaced by a peculiar combination of character-psychologizing and canonical divination, producing that familiar Bloomian sentence, which is always adding superfluous codas to itself, and in which three or four favored authors are tossed around in an approving oil and coated with the substance of their creations…</span></span></i></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">All true, of course, but it was also true five or six years earlier when Wood wrote the very positive review of the Shakespeare book, published well within that decade of “luxurious padding,” “superfluous codas,” and the rest of the late-Bloom afflatus. What Wood chides in the first review he castigates in the second, without ever explaining the inconsistency.</span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">What is consistent, however, is Wood’s discomfort with a prodigiously well-read and productive precursor, consistent not only between the two Bloom reviews (in spite of the difference in tone), but across all of the essays in which Wood puts aside his usual novel-gazing to treat of well-known critics from previous generations. Steiner, Wilson, Bloom – by some astonishing coincidence these three quite different figures all suffer from variations of the same “too many notes” disorder. They know too much and are vulgar enough to show it. James Wood, on the other hand, knows better (or at least less) and has the good manners to be the right kind of critic: a miniaturist.</span></span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:Verdana, serif;font-size:180%;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:17px;"><br /></span></span></p> <!--EndFragment-->Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-45471772670080810242010-07-26T19:51:00.000-07:002010-07-27T07:05:02.600-07:00The Erudite Mr. Wood<!--StartFragment--> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Picador (a division of Macmillan, which in turn is a subsidiary of the Holtzbrinck Publishing </span><a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2010/01/where-literature-comes-from.html"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">mega-conglomerate</span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">) is bringing out a new edition of </span><a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2010/01/birth-of-literary-fiction-from-spirit.html"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Jiminy Critic</span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">’s first collection of literary journalism, </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">The Broken Estate: Essays on Literature and Credulity</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">. It’s got a new introduction by the author, a new cover design to bring it in line with the quaintly (and appropriately) old-fashioned look of </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">How Fiction Works</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">, and a new price: $17.00. For a trade paperback.</span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">In honor of the event, I’ve taken the liberty of lifting this interesting reader’s <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Broken-Estate-Essays-Literature-Belief/product-reviews/0312429568/ref=cm_cr_dp_synop?ie=UTF8&showViewpoints=0&sortBy=bySubmissionDateDescending#R2WN6N74R519DV">review</a> by Hershel Parker from the book’s Amazon.com page (it reviews the original edition, but it was posted only a year ago, in July 2009). Parker, if you don’t know, is the author of the definitive scholarly biography of Herman Melville (in 2 volumes), as well as co-editor of an edition of Melville’s complete works. His remarks on Wood generally and the Melville chapter of </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">The Broken Estate</span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> in particular are valuable because they speak to the meme, repeated so many times that it has taken on a </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">lifeness </span></span></i></span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">of its own, that Wood is a tremendously “erudite” and even “learned” individual (by which standard Malcolm Gladwell is a “man of science” and Thomas Friedman a “public intellectual”).</span></span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"><br /></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Verdana;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">“The Redundant Smirking Mr. Wood”</span></i></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Verdana;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">by Hershel Parker</span></i></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Verdana;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">I've been working hard on Herman Melville and not paying attention to recent criticism, although I have been aware of James Wood when he popped up in one English or American paper or another taking pay for writing reviews on Melville which turned into bullying bloviations on theology. His information about Melville's life was sketchy, I knew, and I thought his notions of Calvinism vs. Unitarianism were shaky. Well, while I was dismissing Wood as a religious obsessive posing as a book reviewer everyone else was strewing palm branches along his way. Cynthia Ozick huffed at the idea that Wood was called "our best young literary critic." Untrue, cried she: "He is our best literary critic." Adam Begley in the Financial Times proclaimed Wood "the best literary critic of his generation." In Los Angeles Times Gideon Lewis-Kraus elaborated: "To call James Wood the finest literary critic writing in English today, as is commonplace, is to treat him like some sort of fancy terrier at Westminster. It both exaggerates and diminishes his importance. . . . It would be better to say simply that Wood is among the very few contemporary writers of great consequence. . . . He has earned a rare and awesome cultural authority." How wrong could I be?</span></i></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Verdana;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Not very. Take the New Republic review of Delbanco's Melville: His World and Work which begins with some off-base theological bullying then frankly turns into an essay on Melville's language in Moby-Dick:</span></i></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in;mso-pagination:none;mso-layout-grid-align:none;text-autospace:none"><span style="font-family:Verdana;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">"Melville's words muster their associations, their deep histories, on every page. There are scores of allusions to the King James Bible. Adjectives and adverbs are placed in glorious, loaded convoy: 'The warmly cool, clear, ringing, perfumed, overflowing, redundant days, were as crystal goblets of Persian sherbert, heaped up, flaked up, with rose water snow.' With a tiny smirk of irony, Melville saves the word 'redundant' for the last place in that gorgeous list: as if to say, 'I dare you to find any of these multiple adjectives . . . redundant!'"</span></i></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Verdana;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Well, correct "sherbert" to "sherbet" and put a hyphen in "rose-water," to start with, assuming my online text is right. Then what?</span></i></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Verdana;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">The first thing you think of, if you know even a shallow history of Melville's words, is that he cannot be using "redundant" to mean "duplicative." He must be using it in a Latin sense, one easy enough to establish with a dictionary if you don't know Latin.</span></i></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Verdana;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">If you know Melville, whether or not you know Latin, you know that he takes many latinate words from John Milton. It takes only a moment on Google to locate a couple of likely analogues in Paradise Lost and in Samson Agonistes.</span></i></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Verdana;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">As it happens, the use of "redundant" in Paradise Lost is in a description of Satan as serpent which Melville was very familiar with: "his head / Crested aloft, and carbuncle his eyes; / With burnish'd neck of verdant gold, erect / Amidst his circling spires, that on the grass / Floated redundant: pleasing was his shape, /And lovely" . . . . Melville used the passage in The Confidence-Man, for example. Or look at this passage in Samson Agonistes where the fallen hero laments his condition: "to visitants a gaze, / Or pitied object, these redundant locks / Robustious to no purpose clust'/ring down, / Vain monument of strength" . . . . (lines 567-570).</span></i></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Verdana;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">When Melville's two-volume Milton first came into view in 1983 in the Phillips Gallery I got a glimpse of it, and when it came up for auction again at Sotheby's in 1989 I was equipped with a copy of the same set, onto which one cloudy Manhattan day I inscribed all Melville's marks and annotations I could see. Now I open my duplicate of Melville's Milton, marked as he marked his copy, and see that Melville did some underlining and marking of the page opposite "Floated redundant" and that in the Samson Agonistes he drew a line along all of 559-574, with another, shorter line along 567-569, three of the lines I just quoted, including "these redundant locks / Robustious."</span></i></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Verdana;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">It apparently did not occur to Wood that "redundant" did not mean something like "duplicative." If he had been sensitive to Melville's language enough to know the word had to be Miltonic (or most likely was Miltonic), he could have consulted Melville & Milton (2004), ed. Robin Grey, which reprints from Leviathan (March and October 2002) the transcription of Melville's marginalia in his Milton by Grey and Douglas Robillard, in consultation with me. But that would have meant being scholarly instead of a smirking, superior critic.</span></i></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Verdana;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Nice people don't smirk. Dubya was a compulsive smirker, and look where he got the world. Wood may smirk, also compulsively, but he is wrong to bring Melville into his nasty little clique of smirkers. I could muster many other examples from Wood on Melville. He may be the greatest critic in the world, but he does not know anything worth knowing about Melville, and he certainly does not understand the nobility of Melville's literary ancestry and the towering grandeur of Melville's spirit.</span><o:p></o:p></i></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Verdana;font-size:13.0pt;"> <o:p></o:p></span></p> <!--EndFragment-->Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com19tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-13001806225557708442010-07-22T16:24:00.000-07:002010-07-22T18:29:45.542-07:00Culinary*<!--StartFragment--> <p class="MsoNormal">An excerpt from a <i>Harvard Crimson</i><span style="font-style:normal"> <a href="http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2010/3/9/humor-faulkner-sound-fury/">article</a>, “Humor Reveals the Road to Faulkner,” on the subject of James Wood’s pedagogy (he holds, after all, the title of “Professor of the Practice of Literary Criticism”):</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><i>In James Wood’s popular class “Postwar British and American Fiction,” the first half of a lecture is invariably devoted to Wood reading aloud his favorite excerpts from the book under discussion. “Flip to page twenty-nine where Nabokov writes, ‘The cat, as Pnin would say, cannot be hid in a bag.’” Wood grins, before eagerly pushing forward, “Ah, yes, yes! There’s a great bit four pages earlier when Pnin gets dentures and Nabokov describes his tongue as ‘a fat sleek seal, [which] used to flop and slide so happily among the familiar rocks, but now not a landmark remained.’”</i></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><i>“What do you think about this passage?... Why is it funny?... Is it funny at all?... Is there another phrase you liked?... What made you laugh?” Wood asks. At first the students are taken aback by this barrage of surprisingly personal questions. After a half-minute of silence one girl gathers the courage to ask Professor Wood what the passage meant. He leans back chuckling in his chair before reassuringly answering, “Oh, I don’t have much to say about that bit. I’ve just always found it a good laugh.” Looking back on the class, I now realize Wood’s response is the most genuine reaction to the passage.</i></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><i>The professor’s unusual approach to lecturing immediately immerses his students in the milieu of the novel through short, funny excerpts, but more importantly it gives students permission to enjoy reading a book . . .<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: normal; "> </span></i></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Ah, yes, yes! – I remember when this kind of charming thing was called “Affective Criticism.”<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Along with Moral Criticism – another of the distinguished Professor’s specialties – it was supposed to have gone out with the daguerreotype and ladies’ finishing schools.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>I can just see the final exam:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span><i>What do you think of Elizabeth’s decision at the end of the novel?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Would you have made the same choice?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Discuss.</i><span style="font-style:normal"><span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>No doubt it’s the English Department’s most popular course offering – among Journalism majors and athletes.</span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><br /></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;">* (In the Brechtian sense.)</span></p> <!--EndFragment-->Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-90297134967812078942010-07-17T17:28:00.000-07:002010-07-17T17:33:15.260-07:00The Wrong Kind of Snow<!--StartFragment--> <p class="MsoNormal">British playwright David Hare on James Wood:</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><i>How can there be a wrong way to make good art? And, indeed, what point does criticism serve when it asserts only “This is not the sort of thing of which I approve”? When a literary critic such as James Wood twists himself into a pretzel explaining exactly why the novel he has under review is the wrong kind of good novel, he sounds like nothing so much as a Railtrack official railing against the wrong kind of snow.<o:p></o:p></i></p> (<a href="http://jameswaites.ilatech.org/?p=5500">h/t</a>) <!--EndFragment-->Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-71508470896673877742010-03-06T09:16:00.000-08:002010-03-06T09:29:58.485-08:00How Corruption Works<div><br /></div><div>From <a href="http://www.thelmagazine.com/TheMeasure/archives/2010/03/05/james-woods-favorite-books-are-the-ones-his-editor-also-happened-to-edit">The L Magazine</a>:</div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" white-space: pre-wrap; font-family:'Lucida Grande';font-size:11px;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" white-space: normal; font-family:Georgia, 'Times New Roman', Times, serif;font-size:13px;"><h3 class="postTitle" id="a1558773" style="margin-top: 20px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-weight: bold; text-align: left; font-size:20px;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><i>James Wood's Favorite Books Are the Ones His Editor Also Happened to Edit</i></span></h3><div><span class="Apple-style-span"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i>Posted by </i></span></span><a href="http://www.thelmagazine.com/newyork/ArticleArchives?author=1133969" style="color: rgb(9, 71, 96); "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i>Mark Asch</i></span></span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i> on </i></span></span><span class="postTime"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i>Fri, Mar 5, 2010</i></span></span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i> at </i></span></span><span class="postTime"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i>4:36 PM</i></span></span></span></span></div></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" white-space: pre-wrap; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i> </i></span></span></span></div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i>As we reported earlier, the new editor of the Paris Review will be the impeccably credentialed Farrar, Strauss and Giroux editor Lorin Stein; news items on his appointment mention, by way of introduction, that his recent high-profile credits include collaborations with Richard Price on Lush Life, Lydia Davis on many of the stories recently included in The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis, and James Wood on How Fiction Works.</i></span></span></span></span><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i><br /></i></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i>Two of the most generous reviews Wood has written during his time as a critic at the New Yorker were of Richard Price's Lush Life, and The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis. </i></span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i><br /></i></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i>Publishing is of course an incredibly incestuous business—if you eliminated all conflicts of interest not even amateur Amazon reviewers would be left standing—nobody's arguing that Price and Davis aren't terrific. Or, for that matter, that Wood's reviews of their books aren't illuminating and admirably specific in their analysis and praise—we're better off having them.</i></span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i><br /></i></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i>Still, to the best of my knowledge nobody has yet pointed out that the book critic for the New Yorker shares an editor with some of the authors he's advocated for. This fact seems worth mentioning—it's better publicized than unacknowledged, for a number of reasons having to do with us being honest about what criticism is for and how it's possible to practice it.</i></span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i><br /></i></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><i>(He also shares a publisher with Rivka Galchen and John Wray, whose recent novels he also liked.)</i></span></span></span></span><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" white-space: pre-wrap; font-family:'Lucida Grande';font-size:11px;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" white-space: normal; line-height: 18px; font-family:Georgia, 'Times New Roman', Times, serif;font-size:13px;"><p style="margin-top: 1.12em; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 1.12em; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"></span></span></p></span></span></div></div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-25264956666772631922010-01-31T20:37:00.000-08:002010-01-31T21:16:49.579-08:00Woodcutter's Weekend<div><br /></div><div>From A.D. Jameson's <a href="http://bigother.com/2010/01/31/tiny-shocks-uncovering-the-reductive-plot-of-james-woods-how-fiction-works/#more-3992">critique</a> of <i>How Fiction Works</i> at <i><a href="http://bigother.com/">Big Other</a></i>:</div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" color: rgb(51, 51, 51); line-height: 19px; font-family:verdana, tahoma, arial, sans-serif;font-size:12px;"><p style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; margin-top: 0.7em; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.7em; margin-left: 0px; line-height: 1.6em; "><i>Literary critics are storytellers themselves, and we appraise them by how compelling, and how useful, we find their stories about fiction. Wood’s own account is smug and small. Again and again he dogmatically insists upon fiction that’s written in the third-person limited, that enlists only the most appropriate metaphors and details, that employs a language that’s musical but not over-aestheticized, and whose plot takes a definite backseat to the characters—the all-important characters!—who should “[serve] to illuminate an essential truth or characteristic” (128). By the time that Wood is finished carving away at fiction, little remains of the art form that I know and love. But James Wood, ever the arbiter, ever the tastemaker, desires only a </i><span style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; ">certain</span><i> fiction: one that’s primarily truthful, stylized but never over-stylized, and never intrusive—like Goldilocks’s chosen bowl of porridge, chair, and bed, it must be exceedingly, prissily<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: normal;"> </span></i><span style="padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; ">just-so</span><i>. Unsurprisingly, Wood’s preferred fiction is realist, and bourgeois, and 99.9% dead, white, and male.</i></p><div><br /></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">From Justin Jamail's </span></span><a href="http://www.therevealer.org/archives/main_story_003184.php"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">critique </span></span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">of Wood's Paul Auster review, posted at T</span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">he Revealer</span></span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">:</span></span></div><div><br /></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0); line-height: 18px; "><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">Turning now to the conceptual gobbledygook and beginning with the silliest example: “Saramago and Roth,” Wood writes, “both assemble and disassemble their stories in ways that seem fundamentally grave. Auster, despite all the games, is the least ironic of contemporary writers.” Had I read that out of context I should have thought that the first sentence was meant to disparage Saramago and Roth and the second to praise Auster. If there’s one thing popular writing suffers from it’s a surfeit of gravity and irony. I don’t know who the most ironic of contemporary writers is, but I don’t think I would enjoy reading his or her books. I am, by the way, looking forward to Wood’s forthcoming monograph explaining his method for separating those things which are merely or seemingly grave from those which are “fundamentally” grave. Moreover, I wonder what the “gravity” of assembling (or disassembling, as the case may be) stories has to do with being an ironic contemporary writer. The juxtaposition of the sentences suggests that Wood felt a logical connection between the two sentences, but I cannot find one. It’s as if he had said, “Saramago and Roth are blue. Auster, despite not speaking Chinese, is carrot-colored.”<br /><br />The notion that narrative “games” must have as their goal the sort of irony associated with post-war European and American post-modern writers betrays a comically limited approach. As it happens, the narrative “games” at work in Auster’s prose come directly out of nineteenth-century American writers such as Irving, Poe, Hawthorne and Melville and, though an awareness of recent European and American literature is evident, the influence of post-war writing is slight. Wood makes no attempt to consider what it might mean for a contemporary writer to be so strongly connected to such nineteenth-century American writers (or, indeed, to those early and mid-twentieth century journalists and fiction writers whose influence is also felt in Auster). Complaining about Auster’s failure to live up to the standards of Saramago or Roth is like complaining that Chesterton doesn’t write like Dreiser: it’s as boring </span></i><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">as a tautology</span></i><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> and half as useful. </span></i></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color:#000000;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" line-height: 18px;font-size:small;"><i><br /></i></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color:#000000;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 18px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">And from Claire Messud's "</span></span><a href="http://www.guernicamag.com/features/1528/seven_remarkable_women_claire/"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Writers, Plain and Simple</span></span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">," the introductory essay to her guest-edited fiction selection in the latest </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Guernica</span></span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">:</span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color:#000000;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" line-height: 18px;font-size:medium;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color:#000000;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" line-height: 18px;"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">Just over ten years ago, the Modern Library compiled a list of the 100 best novels of the twentieth century: only nine of them were by women, and Edith Wharton accounted for two books. Were there really only eight women writers of major significance in those 100 years? [ . . . ] When, in 2006, the </span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">New York Times</span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> ran a list of the best American fiction of the past twenty-five years, Toni Morrison’s </span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">Beloved</span><b><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> </span></i></b><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">was pronounced the winner; but she and Marilynne Robinson (for </span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">Housekeeping</span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">) were the only women out of twenty-two titles (and that’s counting Updike’s </span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">Rabbit</span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> tetralogy and McCarthy’s </span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">Border</span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> trilogy as a single book each). Just last September, when the international literary magazine </span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">Wasafiri</span><b><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> </span></i></b><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">solicited responses from twenty-five global writers about the work that has most shaped world literature over the past quarter century, just four women—Elizabeth Bishop, Mildred Taylor, Toni Morrison, and Quarratulain Hyder—were on the list. And this is in a world where women account for 80 percent of fiction readers.</span></i></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color:#000000;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 18px;"><i><br /></i></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color:#000000;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" line-height: 18px;font-size:small;"><i><br /></i></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color:#000000;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="line-height: 18px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Hey Claire, while you're at it, let's not leave out your husband's widely-acclaimed masterpiece, </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">How Fiction Works</span></span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">, whose bibliography of over 90 works consulted ("the books at hand in my study," in his words) included only 11 titles by women writers (with Woolf and George Eliot accounting for two titles each), about the same proportion as in that Modern Library list you justifiably criticize. (And, er, only a single African-American, since you seem to be concerned about underrepresented populations...)</span></span></span></span></div></span></div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-28832998100345379952010-01-29T12:13:00.000-08:002010-01-29T12:21:11.836-08:00The Birth of Literary Fiction from the Spirit of Bathos<div style="text-align: left;"><span style="color:black;">The secret of James Wood’s criticism lies in its revision of a myth – that of Orpheus and Eurydice.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Wood’s restaging of this ancient tale – found nowhere in his work, yet implicit in every sentence he writes – is distinguished from all others by the novelty of a heedful, one might almost say <i>law-abiding</i></span><span style="color:black;">, protagonist.</span></div> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;"> <o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">As in other accounts, the song-master Orpheus descends into the vasty deeps of the Underworld in search of his beloved Eurydice, where his plaint so stirs the hearts of heavy-lidded Hades and blue-lipped Persephone that they grant him the unprecedented privilege of fetching his dead wife back to the land of the living.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>But on one condition:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span><i>Walk before her on your way, and, while you are still within the borders of our dark demesne, do not set eyes upon her.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Don’t look back!</i></span><span style="color:black;"><span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;"> <o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">In Wood’s retelling, you can see Orpheus’s lips move as he gets these instructions by heart.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Then, confident of success, he makes his way towards the Exit sign, followed by the soft footfalls of his bloodless bride.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>But as he nears the threshold, a cold wind rises up from the caverns behind him, carrying a haunting whisper:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span><i>Fail again . . . Fail better . . . </i></span></p><p class="MsoNormal">Orpheus experiences a pang of temptation, a sudden and almost irresistible impulse to turn…</p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;"> <o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">As luck would have it, however, there’s this tiny cartoon figure hanging out on the side of the cave, see?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>His name is Jiminy Critic, and he’s got a little top hat and a little English accent – very cute!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>And he hops onto Orpheus’s shoulder and squeaks – well, really he’s shouting but it comes out like a high, piping squeak – “<i>Don’t look back, Orpheus!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Ignore those whispers and remember your instructions!</i></span><span style="color:black;">”<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;"> <o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">Orpheus nods to himself, resolved.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Quite right, better not look back!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>He leads Eurydice across the threshold of the underworld and keeps going until they’re really quite a good distance away – in fact they’re already in a forest clearing by the time Eurydice taps him on his shoulder (the other one, without the Critic on it).<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;"> <o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">Orpheus turns – it’s her!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Eurydice!<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>Orpheus!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Darling!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>They fall into each other’s arms.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Success!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Reunited!<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>No crumbling to dust or vanishing into thin air!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>And no maenads to tear him apart!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Everything ruddy and shiny and whole! Success!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Sweet, sweet success!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>They settle down to a nice little domesticity, having tea, talking about their day.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>And then, at night . . . but we won’t go there – it wouldn’t be tactful!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Suffice it to say:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Mission Accomplished!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>And a few months later – look! – out pops Claire Messud’s <i>The Emperor’s Children</i></span><span style="color:black;">!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>And then Ian McEwan’s <i>Saturday</i></span><span style="color:black;">!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>And Joseph O’Neill’s <i>Netherland</i></span><span style="color:black;">!<o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;"> <o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">Orpheus turns to the camera, winks, and gives a big thumbs-up – Thanks, Jiminy!</span></p><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 238); -webkit-text-decorations-in-effect: underline; "><img src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh3PdfciRNAq-UyqaTx09Knrr_jBfMLUn0U5BpanF6HsfHr3KHvKWmGj91ympAegZu790hkbadIwk7RILRL0dlzbL5rUpqvPovP8V4kXKF4hOWYeuMnyFF0m7TT3le2P0Z8B2oR3gWZB6xV/s400/j-crickett.jpg" border="0" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5432257738237819394" style="display: block; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: auto; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: auto; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 383px; height: 400px; " /></span><p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: center;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic; ">“Remember kids – always let your Critic be your guide!”</span></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></p> <!--EndFragment-->Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com12tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-73631484284112472842010-01-16T07:14:00.000-08:002010-01-16T07:17:55.618-08:00"There's nothing to the man": Harold Bloom on James Wood<span class="Apple-style-span" style=" color: rgb(41, 41, 41); line-height: 18px; font-family:'Times New Roman', georgia, serif;font-size:13px;"><b style="font-weight: bold; "><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;"><br /></span></span></div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;">[Interviewer]: Oh, but hey, what about James Wood? I’m sort of kidding, of course.<br /></span></span></b><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;"><br />[Bloom]: Oh, don’t even mention him. He doesn’t exist. He just does not exist at all.<br /><br /></span></span><b style="font-weight: bold; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;">I thought his last book was fun to read because he gets so enthusiastic about things, but yeah, I don’t really understand the phenomenon of him on the whole.<br /></span></span></b><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;"><br />My dear, phenomena are always being bubbled up. There are period pieces in criticism as there are period pieces in the novel and in poetry. The wind blows and they will go away.<br /><br /></span></span><b style="font-weight: bold; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;">His last book seemed to be a period piece at least in terms of its cover design. It looked like a textbook from the 30s or 40s. It was kind of cute.<br /></span></span></b><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;"><br />A publisher wanted to send me the book and I said, “Please don’t.” I think it was my own publisher, of the huge book I’m working on called </span></span><em style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; border-top-width: 0px; border-right-width: 0px; border-bottom-width: 0px; border-left-width: 0px; border-style: initial; border-color: initial; outline-width: 0px; outline-style: initial; outline-color: initial; font-weight: inherit; font-style: italic; vertical-align: baseline; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;">Living Labyrinth: Literature and Influence</span></span></em><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;">, in which I’ve been bogged for five years now. It’s meant to be a grand summa and may be my undoing. Anyway, I told them, “Please don’t bother to send it.” I didn’t want to have to throw it out. There’s nothing to the man. He also has—and I haven’t ever read him on me—but I’m told he wrote a vicious review of me in the </span></span><em style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; border-top-width: 0px; border-right-width: 0px; border-bottom-width: 0px; border-left-width: 0px; border-style: initial; border-color: initial; outline-width: 0px; outline-style: initial; outline-color: initial; font-weight: inherit; font-style: italic; vertical-align: baseline; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;">New Republic</span></span></em><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;">, which I never look at anyway, in which he clearly evidenced, as one of my old friends put it, a certain anxiety of influence. I don’t want to talk about him.</span></span><br /></span><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'Times New Roman', georgia, serif;font-size:100%;color:#292929;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" line-height: 18px;font-size:13px;"><br /></span></span></div><div style="text-align: right;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'Times New Roman', georgia, serif;font-size:100%;color:#292929;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" line-height: 18px;font-size:13px;"> (from <a href="http://www.viceland.com/int/v15n12/htdocs/harold-bloom.php?country=">this</a> interview)</span></span></div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-64754404927681020722010-01-08T15:07:00.000-08:002010-01-09T14:03:43.445-08:00Where "Literature" Comes From<div><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEimf6gwGRRSL_PxA9uNaOU8UsAVT3chxu7pFj9ZdGq4mXcrti42adJ4BkvXvm7HZgnUfSaMbb13Pb-0bvvdnGQW8WOAEpeHMML6NWx9lBBBBNIORefp-B8Ih1fdBeclCikPt_4Dea3HUuRl/s1600-h/5.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 337px; height: 328px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEimf6gwGRRSL_PxA9uNaOU8UsAVT3chxu7pFj9ZdGq4mXcrti42adJ4BkvXvm7HZgnUfSaMbb13Pb-0bvvdnGQW8WOAEpeHMML6NWx9lBBBBNIORefp-B8Ih1fdBeclCikPt_4Dea3HUuRl/s400/5.jpg" border="0" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5424509679991045298" /></a> <!--StartFragment--> <p class="MsoNormal">In the little over two years since James Wood ditched the<i> New Republic</i><span style="font-style:normal"> (circulation 60,000) for the</span><i> New Yorker</i><span style="font-style:normal"> (circulation 1,062,000), twenty-two of his <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/bios/james_wood/search?contributorName=james%20wood">reviews</a> have appeared in the </span><i>New Yorker</i><span style="font-style:normal">’s pages: </span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal"> <o:p></o:p></p> <table border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" style="border-collapse:collapse; border:none;mso-border-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <tbody><tr style="height:19.75pt"> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt;height:19.75pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><b> </b></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><b><o:p></o:p></b></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-left:none;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; height:19.75pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><b> date</b></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><b><o:p></o:p></b></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-left:none;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; height:19.75pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><b> title</b></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><b><o:p></o:p></b></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-left:none;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; height:19.75pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><b> author</b></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><b><o:p></o:p></b></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-left:none;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; height:19.75pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><b>publisher</b></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">1.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">1 Oct 2007</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">The Book of Psalms</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"> </span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">(Robert Alter trans.)</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Norton</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">2.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">15 Oct 2007</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Exit Ghost</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Philip Roth</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Houghton Mifflin</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">3</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">26 Nov 2007</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">War and Peace</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Tolstoy (Richard Peaver & Larissa Volokhonksy, trans.)</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"> </span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Knopf</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">4.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">24 Dec 2007</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Diary of a Bad Year</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">J.M. Coetzee</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"> </span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Viking</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">5.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">3 Mar 2008</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">His Illegal Self</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">My Revolutions</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Peter Carey</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Hari Kunzru</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Knopf</span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Dutton</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"> </span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">6.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">7 Apr 2008</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Lush Life</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Richard Price</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">FSG</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"> </span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">7.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">26 May 2008</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Netherland</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Joseph O’Neill</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Pantheon</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">8.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">9 Jun 2008</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">God’s Problem</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Bart D. Ehrman</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">HarperOne</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">9.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">23 Jun 2008</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Atmospheric Disturbances</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Rivka Galchen </span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">FSG</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">10.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">26 Jul 2008</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">The Lazarus Project</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Aleksandar Hemon</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Riverhead</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">11.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">8 Sept 2008</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Home</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Marilynne Robinson</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">FSG</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">12.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">27 Oct 2008</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Death With Interruptions</span></i></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Jose Saramago</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Harcourt</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">13.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">1 Dec 2008</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">The World Is What It Is</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"> (Naipaul bio.)</span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Patrick French</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Knopf</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">14.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">15 Dec 2008</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Revolutionary Road</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Richard Yates</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Everyman’s Library</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">15.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">30 Mar 2009</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Lowboy</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">John Wray</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">FSG</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">16.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">13 Apr 2009</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Facing Unpleasant Facts: Narrative Essays / All Art is Propaganda: Literary Essays</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">George Orwell</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Harcourt</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial, serif;"><br /></span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">17.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">20 Apr 2009</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Jeff in Venice</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Geoff Dyer</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Pantheon</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">18.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">29 Jun 2009</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Censoring an Iranian Love Story</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Shahriar Mandanipour</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Knopf</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">19.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">31 Aug 2009</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Reason, Faith, and Revolution</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Terry Eagleton</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"> </span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Yale UP</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">20.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">5 Oct 2009</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Generosity</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Richard Powers</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">FSG</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">21.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">19 Oct 2009</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Collected Stories</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Lydia Davis</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">FSG</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="26" valign="top" style="width:25.85pt;border:solid windowtext .5pt; border-top:none;mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">22.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="79" valign="top" style="width:78.55pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">30 Nov 2009</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="131" valign="top" style="width:130.5pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Invisible</span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="121" valign="top" style="width:120.85pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Paul Auster</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> </td> <td width="87" valign="top" style="width:87.05pt;border-top:none;border-left: none;border-bottom:solid windowtext .5pt;border-right:solid windowtext .5pt; mso-border-top-alt:solid windowtext .5pt;mso-border-left-alt:solid windowtext .5pt; padding:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt"> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:arial;">Holt</span><o:p></o:p></p> </td> </tr> </tbody></table> <p class="MsoNormal">These reviews cover twenty-four titles by twenty-five writers (if we include the translators of the Psalms and the Tolstoy volumes).<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Eighteen of the titles are fiction, or rather, with the exception of Lydia Davis’s <i>Collected Stories</i><span style="font-style:normal">, novels.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal">A small number of the fiction reviews concern writers who have already attained some kind of classic or canonical status (Tolstoy, Orwell, Yates), while a roughly equivalent proportion take up relative newcomers such as Wray, Galchen, Hemon.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>The bulk of the reviews – easily over half – are devoted to the works of writers who, while not necessarily classic or canonical, have established reputations, such as Coetzee, Saramago, Robinson, etc.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Sometimes, of course – as in the cases of the Powers and Auster reviews – the argument is that the reputation is undeserved.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Fifteen of the eighteen fiction volumes were written originally in English, by writers living in the US, UK, or former Commonwealth (Australia), although some of these writers have international backgrounds (Hemon was born in Sarajevo, O’Neill is part Turkish and was born in Ireland, etc.).</p> <p class="MsoNormal">Only 4 out of the twenty-five total authors are women (Rivka Galchen, Marilynne Robinson, Lydia Davis, and translator Larissa Volokhonsky).<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>But if the list is primarily male, it is even more “white.”<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>There are no African-American authors, no Latino authors.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Shahriar Mandanipour (from Iran) and Hari Kunzru (a Brit with some Kashmiri in his background, who has to share his review with Peter Carey) add a few drops of melanin, and one of the books is about Naipaul even though a white guy wrote it.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>(If we’re feeling really charitable we could throw in Joseph O’Neill’s Turkish half, but that’s about it.)<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>There were no books by women of color.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Interestingly, this breakdown is roughly equivalent to the proportions in the index of the “books at hand” that Wood consulted in his cozy study while writing <i>How Fiction Works</i><span style="font-style:normal">, a list of ninety-three titles including 3 by writers of color and around 9 women authors.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>(Yet Wood’s “wide reading” and “diverse tastes” are regularly extolled by his fluffers.)</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Perhaps most significant, however, is the fact that only 2 out of the twenty-four titles that Wood has reviewed at the <i>New Yorker </i><span style="font-style:normal">are published by independent publishing houses – i.e., publishers not owned and controlled by one of the “Big Six” media mega-conglomerates (Random House/Bertelsmann, Macmillan/Holtzbrinck, Simon & Schuster/ViaCom, HarperCollins Harcourt/News Corporation, the Penguin Group/Pearson, and the Time-Warner Book Group/Hachette).<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>These 2 titles are Terry Eagleton’s </span><i>Reason, Faith, and Revolution</i><span style="font-style:normal">, published by Yale University Press, and Robert Alter’s translation of </span><i>The Book of Psalms</i><span style="font-style:normal">, published by Norton.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>The twenty-two other titles, including <u>all of the fiction</u>, are published by imprints belonging to 5 of the Big Six:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>7 titles from Random House/Bertelsmann (Knopf, Pantheon, etc.), 7 titles from Macmillan/Holtzbrinck (FSG, Holt), 6 from HarperCollins Harcourt/News Corporation (Houghton Mifflin, HarperOne, etc.), 3 from the Penguin Group/Pearson (Dutton, Riverhead), and 1 from Hachette.<span class="MsoFootnoteReference"><a style="mso-footnote-id:ftn1" href="http://www.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=4951486642731990675&postID=6475440492768102072#_ftn1" name="_ftnref1" title="">[1]</a></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal">In the larger literary venues (and on the more sycophantic lit-blogs) this phenomenon of corporate pre-determination of the “literary field” goes almost entirely unremarked.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>It amounts to “the repressed” of mainstream book-reviewing, as that which must remain unspoken in order for a certain type of utterance to exist at all.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Reviews are written as if the titles swim into the reviewer’s ken on their own little spiritual wings or somehow magically materialize in the critic’s inbox; as if literature were somehow self-generating and “immediate” rather than constructed and subject to considerable mediation.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>There is in James Wood’s work not the least institutional self-consciousness or self-questioning, not a moment of institutional critique.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>“Literature” and “fiction,” when he speaks of them, are mystified categories.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">This is not to say that the corporate-monopoly publishers never publish – or that their ad-men like Wood never positively review – “good” books or books by interesting or significant writers, even occasionally writers who, in one way or another, challenge prevailing literary conventions (largely the conventions of the commercial genre known as “literary fiction,” practiced by Wood favorites such as Joseph O’Neill and Ian McEwan).<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>José Saramago, for instance, is one such interesting and significant writer; J.M. Coetzee, and Lydia Davis, while less accomplished, are two others who have also made the cut since Wood started at the <i>New Yorker</i><span style="font-style:normal">.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>But the industry’s ostensible embrace of such authors is skewed by the way they are institutionally read.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>As I argued in a previous <a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2008/12/james-and-giant-sentence.html">post</a>, for example, Wood’s approval of Jose Saramago’s </span><i>Death With Interruptions</i><span style="font-style:normal"> is purchased at the cost of ignoring the defamiliarizing implications of Saramago’s style (i.e. his deployment of the “baroque sentence”) and foisting onto the text a <a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2008/12/to-dilute-and-obscure-again-on-james.html">spurious</a> advocacy of “original sin.”<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>More recently, in his review of Lydia Davis’s </span><i>Collected Stories</i><span style="font-style:normal">, Wood smoothes over the “centrifugal” elements of formal experiment and fragmentation in favor of a “centripetal” reading which has the effect of transforming the collection into some kind of trite autobiographical-confessional novel.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal">The silence of major reviewers such as Wood on the actual conditions of their work is not the result of any conspiracy.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Rather, the institutional filters are in place to “vet” the candidate-reviewers as they rise up the ranks:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>the jump from, say, the <i>Guardian</i><span style="font-style:normal"> to the </span><i>New Republic</i><span style="font-style:normal"> just doesn’t take place unless the reviewer has shown an inclination to be accommodating to prevailing aesthetic and political ideologies (including being marketably “provocative” in ways that don’t threaten the overall system and even help to create the illusion of its “openness”).<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Wood has always shown himself to be such a supple accommodator of his employers.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>His December 1996 <a href="http://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/1996/12/topplingthemonument/">savaging</a> of George Steiner in </span><i>Prospect</i><span style="font-style:normal">, for example, should be seen as the young journalist’s application letter to the confirmed Steiner-hater who would, a very short time later, become his new boss, Martin Peretz.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>While working for Peretz, Wood adopted a suitably neoliberal idiom for castigating novelists such as Pynchon, DeLillo, and Morrison for their “unfree” characters (as I outlined <a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2008/12/function-of-humanism-at-present-time.html">here</a>) in order to keep the “cultural” pages in the back of the magazine in line with the explicitly “political” front-matter.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal">But are the only novels worthy of being covered in major reviewing outlets by supposedly major critics like James Wood those brought to us by these five or six mega-corporations?<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>Or if not the only novels, at least “the best”?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Are Joseph O’Neill’s <i>Netherland </i><span style="font-style:normal">(one of Wood’s <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/tny/2008/12/james-wood-eleven-favorite-boo.html">favorite</a> books of 2008) and Geoff Dyer’s </span><i>Jeff in Venice</i><span style="font-style:normal"> (one of Wood’s <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/2009/12/james-wood-on-the-books-of-2009.html">favorites</a> of 2009) really “better” than anything published during that time by New Directions (including authors such as Javier Marias, Horacio Castellanos Moya, and César Aria) or Dalkey Archive Press (including Jean Echenoz, Jean-Philippe Toussaint, Gert Jonke, Lydie Salvayre, Jacques Roubaud, Dumitru Tsepeneag, and Juan Goytisolo)?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>When it comes to young U.S. novelists, are John Wray’s and Rivka Galchen’s books really more interesting and innovative than Lily Hoang’s </span><i>Parabola </i><span style="font-style:normal">(Chiasmus) or Blake Butler’s </span><span><i>Scorch</i></span><i> Atlas</i><span style="font-style:normal"> (Featherproof)?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>If Wood is really as ecumenical in his tastes as the fluffers maintain, where then were the reviews of Charlotte Roche’s </span><i>Wetlands </i><span style="font-style:normal">(Grove), Percival Everett’s </span><i>I Am Not Sidney Poitier</i><span style="font-style:normal"> (Graywolf), Sesshu Foster’s </span><i>World Ball Notebook </i><span style="font-style:normal">(City Lights), Abdourahman Waberi’s </span><i>In the United States of Africa</i><span style="font-style:normal"> (Univ. of Nebraska Press), and Kazim Ali’s </span><i>The Disappearance of Seth</i><span style="font-style:normal"> (Etruscan Press)?<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>Is Wood really as answerable to disinterested considerations of “literary quality” as he purports to be?</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Now, one might argue that Wood is indeed fulfilling his professional responsibilities because he is answerable primarily to his readership – his beloved, mythical “common reader” (or at least the readers of the <i>New Yorker<a style="mso-footnote-id:ftn2" href="http://www.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=4951486642731990675&postID=6475440492768102072#_ftn2" name="_ftnref2" title=""><span class="MsoFootnoteReference"><span style="mso-special-character:footnote">[2]</span></span></a></i><span style="font-style:normal">).<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>He is constrained to evaluate only those books that such a reader is </span><i>likely</i><span style="font-style:normal"> to encounter,</span><i> likely </i><span style="font-style:normal">to purchase.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>And these books – through no fault of Wood’s own – are </span><i>likely</i><span style="font-style:normal"> to be published by the major corporate conglomerates and distributed by the major corporate booksellers that those readers are </span><i>likely</i><span style="font-style:normal"> to frequent.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Hence the number of reviews of authors with established reputations and already-existing readerships – Wood might like Richard Price’s </span><i>Lush Life</i><span style="font-style:normal"> and dislike Richard Powers’ </span><i>Generosity</i><span style="font-style:normal">, but the point is that they were available for reviewing at that time from among the menu of books </span><i>likely</i><span style="font-style:normal"> to be read by “the common reader,” to whom Wood is ultimately answerable.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal">A likely story!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal">This strikes me, rather, as a sort of white-collar, focus-group version of the “only following orders” defense, to which we might return with that most basic of legal questions:<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span><i>cui bono</i><span style="font-style:normal">?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Certainly not readers, but it does benefit the corporations, whose monopolization of culture depends on all-important market share, even where actual profit margins might be very slim.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal">James Wood is an employee of Condé Nast – publishers of a number of prestige magazines including <i>Vanity Fair</i><span style="font-style:normal">, </span><i>GQ, Wired, Glamour</i><span style="font-style:normal">, and </span><i>Vogue</i><span style="font-style:normal"> – which is a division of billionaire S.I. Newhouse Jr.’s media corporation, Advance Publications.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Through its other divisions, Advance Publications owns a variety of newspapers, websites, business journals, TV news stations, and cable and internet providers.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>To some, the control of such broad swathes of different types of media outlets might sound like a conflict of interest (or at least a conflict with the pubic interest – including the interests of, say, “common readers”), but President Bill Clinton and Democrats and Republicans in Congress alike didn’t think so when they passed and signed into law the Telecommunications Act of 1996, “deregulating” the industry and abolishing laws that specifically prohibited such monopolization, now known by its euphemism, “synergy.”<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>(One of the biggest cheerleaders for the pro-corporate agenda of the Clinton-backed Democratic Leadership Council was the </span><i>New Republic</i><span style="font-style:normal">, where Wood would soon make himself comfortable for a decade or so).<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>It should come as no surprise that Advance Publications is a robust <a href="http://projects.publicintegrity.org/telecom/search/profile.aspx?id=M000349&act=print">contributor</a> to Congressional campaigns and media lobbying firms.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>No doubt the candidates backed by Advance Publications vote the “right” way on telecommunications and media legislation. (It would be interesting to see, as well, which candidates are endorsed for office in the editorial pages of the many newspapers owned by Advance.)<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Once again, no conspiracy theory is required to explain how this system works.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>No conspiracy is needed when a <i>consortium of interests</i><span style="font-style:normal"> exists among players who all agree on the basic rules of the game, rules which can then, moreover, remain entirely unspoken while the game is in play.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>James Wood is one small player in this game, churning out ideology in the form of “book reviews” and “literary criticism” to in order to reproduce the political and cultural monopoly of the oligarchs who sign his paycheck.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>He rose through the ranks because he could write so exquisitely (if you’re into kitsch) about what the sausage tasted like without ever threatening to take his readers into the factory farm where the product comes from.</span></p> <div style="mso-element:footnote-list"><br /><hr align="left" width="33%" size="1"> <div style="mso-element:footnote" id="ftn1"> <p class="MsoNormal"><a href="http://www.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=4951486642731990675&postID=6475440492768102072#_ftnref1" name="_ftn1" title=""><span class="MsoFootnoteReference"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">[1]</span></span></span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> The reviews that Wood published in other venues during this time-frame do not alter the picture in any significant way. In </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">London Review of Books</span></span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">, for example, we get his appreciation of the dismal mediocrity of Ian McEwan (published by Vintage, a division of Random House/Bertelsmann), and his denunciation of the dismal mediocrity of A.S. Byatt (published by Chatto, a division of Random House/Bertelsmann). </span></span></p> </div> <div style="mso-element:footnote" id="ftn2"> <p class="MsoFootnoteText"><a href="http://www.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=4951486642731990675&postID=6475440492768102072#_ftnref2" name="_ftn2" title=""><span class="MsoFootnoteReference"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">[2]</span></span></span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> “The average household income of </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">The New Yorker</span></span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> <a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2009/11/wallace-shawn-on-new-yorker-subscribers.html">readers</a> in 2009 is $109,877 (the average income for a U.S. household with a subscription to a news magazine is $92,788 and the U.S. average household income is $50,233).” From the Wikipedia </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">New Yorker</span></span></i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> entry.</span></span><o:p></o:p></p> </div> </div> <!--EndFragment-->Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com11tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-71241781031929354372009-12-14T12:01:00.001-08:002009-12-14T12:02:54.039-08:00WWKAD?<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjgVaL45reofnYPUDDXvmpKirc22hRWCCXU8biUgoaYxtFWAIDnCc_FR8K4T6QaNYitlboqlvLRP_gY6eHYloG3VB_q0LEESHQn9ZCSbakfHjFeri8h39Jam_KOJlMq1Az0jwyM2jnPZxUT/s1600-h/GetImage.aspx.jpeg"><br /><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 269px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjgVaL45reofnYPUDDXvmpKirc22hRWCCXU8biUgoaYxtFWAIDnCc_FR8K4T6QaNYitlboqlvLRP_gY6eHYloG3VB_q0LEESHQn9ZCSbakfHjFeri8h39Jam_KOJlMq1Az0jwyM2jnPZxUT/s400/GetImage.aspx.jpeg" border="0" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5415184496515073826" /></a><div><br /></div><div><br /></div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-76274896617074298642009-12-14T08:36:00.000-08:002009-12-14T12:04:42.379-08:00Considering "How Fiction Works" as a Painting<!--StartFragment--> <p class="MsoNormal">“You must push your head through the wall.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>It is not difficult to penetrate it, for it is made of thin paper.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>But what is difficult is not to let yourself be deceived by the fact that there is already an extremely deceptive painting on the wall showing you pushing your head through.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>It tempts you to say: ‘Am I not pushing through it all the time?’”</p><p class="MsoNormal"><span style="mso-spacerun:yes"><span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space:pre"> </span>Franz Kafka</span></p> <!--EndFragment-->Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-22537360129005662582009-11-28T18:11:00.000-08:002009-11-28T18:15:18.970-08:00From Aimé Césaire’s DISCOURSE ON COLONIALISM (1950)<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj4lNu9BqlSEYUwwwhg74UpyPTeJxa8t9jSeXJwxbPVuoVl0m0-MsYrCNilqzJBZU4ZIJzbvAsOKpCf8rvG_m2AiN1wE9oaLhVoo7_xFAgP8uoTLiEGaxLmVdH5eahz1pzm06ytom0xuSD6/s1600/cesaire_colomb-f.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 395px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj4lNu9BqlSEYUwwwhg74UpyPTeJxa8t9jSeXJwxbPVuoVl0m0-MsYrCNilqzJBZU4ZIJzbvAsOKpCf8rvG_m2AiN1wE9oaLhVoo7_xFAgP8uoTLiEGaxLmVdH5eahz1pzm06ytom0xuSD6/s400/cesaire_colomb-f.jpg" border="0" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5409343176447496450" /></a><p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: verdana;">"Therefore, comrade, you will hold as enemies – loftily, lucidly, consistently – not only sadistic governors and greedy bankers, not only prefects who torture and colonists who flog, not only corrupt, check-licking politicians and subservient judges, but likewise and for the same reason, venomous journalists, goitrous academics, wreathed in dollars and stupidity, ethnographers who go in for metaphysics, presumptuous Belgian theologians, chattering intellectuals born stinking out of the thigh of Nietzsche, the paternalists, the embracers, the corrupters, the back-slappers, the lovers of exoticism, the dividers, the agrarian sociologists, the hoodwinkers, the hoaxers, the hot-air artists, the humbugs, and in general, all those who, performing their functions in the sordid division of labor for the defense of Western bourgeois society, try in diverse ways and by infamous diversions to split up the forces of Progress – even if it means denying the very possibility of Progress – all of them tools of capitalism, all of them, openly or secretly, supporters of plundering colonialism, all of them responsible, all hateful, all slave-traders, all henceforth answerable for the violence of revolutionary action.</span></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent:.5in"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: verdana;"><o:p></o:p></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: verdana;">And sweep out all the obscurers, all the inventors of subterfuges, the charlatans and tricksters, the dealers in gobbledygook. And do not seek to know whether personally these gentlemen are in good or bad faith, whether personally they have good or bad intentions. Whether personally – that is, in the private conscience of Peter or Paul – they are or are not colonialists, because the essential thing is that their highly problematical subjective good faith is entirely irrelevant to the objective social implications of the evil work they perform as watchdogs of colonialism."</span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><br /></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <!--EndFragment-->Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-4110932149362214582009-11-15T19:41:00.000-08:002009-11-15T20:27:35.312-08:00"The Face of a Rat"<div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Wallace Shawn on </span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">New Yorker</span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"> subscribers:</span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:Times;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">"</span></span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" ;font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">No, I'm trying to tell you that people hate you. I'm trying to explain to you about the people who hate you.</span></span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" ;font-family:Times;"><p style="text-align: left;margin-top: 0.7em; margin-bottom: 0.7em; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">Why do you think that they all love you? And what do you think they would love about you? What are you? There's no charm in you, there's nothing graceful, nothing that yields. You're simply a relentless, unbearable fanatic. Yes, the commando who crawls all night through the mud is much less of a fanatic than you. Look at yourself. Look. You walk so stiffly in your kitchen each morning, you approach your cupboard. You open it, and reach for the coffee, the coffee you expect to find on its shelf. And it has to be there. And if one morning it isn't there — oh, the hysteria! — the entire world will have to pay! At the very thought of the unexpected, the unexpected deprivation, you begin to twitch, to panic, to pant. The shortness of breath! Listen to your voice on the telephone, listen to the tone that comes into your voice when you talk to one of your very close friends and you talk about your life and you use those expressions — 'what I need to live on . . .' — 'the amount I need . . .' — solemn, quiet, no histrionics — the tone of hysteria, the tone of the fanatic — well, yes — of course — it makes sense. You understand your situation. Without a place to live, without clothes, without money, you would be like them, you would </span></span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">be</span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> them, you would be what they are — you would be the homeless, you would be the comfortless. So of course, you know it, you will do anything. There are no limits to what you will do. Without the money, your face would become the face of a rat, your hands would be paws — sharp, nimble, ready to scratch, ready to tear."</span></span></span></p><p style="text-align: center;margin-top: 0.7em; margin-bottom: 0.7em; ">*******<span class="Apple-style-span" style=" ;font-family:Georgia;"></span></p><p style="text-align: center;margin-top: 0.7em; margin-bottom: 0.7em; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" ;font-family:Georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">(from his play, </span><a href="http://www.wischik.com/lu/senses/fever.html"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">The Fever</span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">)</span></span></p></span></div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-35549134949666302152009-11-05T12:09:00.000-08:002009-11-05T13:12:03.784-08:00"The Landlords of Fortune": The Publishing Industry and the Bolaño Myth<!--StartFragment--> <p class="MsoNormal">Back in January 2009 I wrote the following in a <a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2009/01/gutless-realism-james-woods-housebroken.html">post</a> called, “Gutless Realism:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>James Wood’s Housebroken Bolaño,” about the ideological intentions (i.e., myth making) behind James Wood’s review of <i>Savage Detectives</i><span style="font-style:normal">:</span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in">We’ve seen how Wood, in his review of <i>Death with Interruptions</i><span style="font-style:normal">, <span style="text-decoration:none;text-underline:nonecolor:windowtext;"><a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2008/12/james-and-giant-sentence.html">turned</a></span> the long-time communist Saramago into an advocate of Original Sin and ‘fallen’ human nature. It’s in a similar spirit that Wood transforms </span><i>The Savage Detectives</i><span style="font-style:normal"> into a story about growing into an adult ‘maturity’ after being disabused of adolescent enthusiasms such as aesthetic and political radicalism. Bolaño in the 1970s was “an avant-garde poet bristling with mad agendas,” and so are the characters who make up the narrative’s “gang of literary guerillas,” says Wood in his summary of the novel. Yet </span><i>Savage Detectives</i><span style="font-style:normal">, he goes on to affirm, “is both melancholy and fortifying; and it is both narrowly about poetry and broadly about the difficulty of sustaining the hopes of youth.” In other words, zany antics involving things like avant-garde agendas and guerilla gangs are fine as long as they are seen (or can be portrayed) as properly childish preoccupations; a book is “good” and merits a positive review to the extent that its pretty sentences are “about” the putting away of childish things. Wood, you see, likes a book with a healthy “message” – it needs to be “about” something that will keep children and servants in line with middle-class morality. And if the book is not really “about” that at all, then like any good <span style="text-decoration:none;text-underline:nonecolor:windowtext;"><a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2008/09/ideological-itinerary.html">media pundit</a></span> he will spin it, cherry-picking the two or three examples that might best support his thesis. Here’s one: “A painter, interviewed in Mexico City in 1981, says that Belano and Lima weren't revolutionaries: ‘They weren't writers. Sometimes they wrote poetry, but I don't think they were poets either’.” See how this works? Here are a few more:</span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoBodyText" style="margin-left:1.5in"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">An Israeli friend of Ulises Lima's says that the importance of the poets' lives had nothing to do with visceral realism: "It has to do with life, with what we lose without knowing it and what we can regain." He continues, and says that what we have lost we can regain, "we can get it back intact." Can we? Minutes after delivering this wisdom this same man dies in a car accident. A Mexican academic, interviewed late in the novel, says that hardly anyone remembers the visceral realists anymore. Many are dead. Lima, he says, is living in Mexico City. "About Arturo Belano," he says, "I know nothing." This is finally how the novel makes good on its playful, postmodern impulses.</span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in">I love that last touch – a novel with “playful, postmodern impulses” is OK as long as it ends in sackcloth and ashes (i.e., “realism,” but not of the visceral variety). Reading Wood’s review, in fact, you would actually think that <i>Savage Detectives</i><span style="font-style:normal"> was a book about apostasy. Wood even includes, apropos of very little, a quote from that arch-apostate Wordsworth: “We poets in our youth begin in gladness; / But thereof come in the end despondency and madness.” Superficially the quotation is supposed to apply to the sad fates of Belano, Lima and their cronies in the novel, but Wood is completely aware of its full resonance and has no doubt chosen it with that in mind. Bolaño and Wordsworth – it’s hard to think of a less suitable literary association; it tells us little about Bolaño’s sensibility or the book’s, although it speaks volumes about the reviewer.</span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Now, let’s turn to some excerpts from Horacio Castellanos Moya’s <a href="http://www.guernicamag.com/features/1382/bolano_inc/">article</a>, “Bolaño Inc.”, published in the latest issue of <i>Guernica</i><span style="font-style:normal">.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>It is written as a personal amplification of some points made in Sarah Pollack’s “Latin America Translated (Again): Roberto Bolaño’s </span><i>The Savage Detectives </i><span style="font-style:normal">in the United States,” in a recent issue of </span><i>Comparative Literature</i><span style="font-style:normal">.</span></p><p class="MsoNormal"> </p><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">The market has its landlords, like everything on this infected planet, and it’s the landlords of the market who decide the mambo that you dance, whether it’s selling cheap condoms or Latin American novels in the U.S.</span></span><span style="mso-spacerun: yes"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> </span></span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">I say this because the central idea of Pollack’s work is that behind the construction of the Bolaño myth was not only a publisher’s marketing operation but also a redefinition of the image of Latin American culture and literature that the North American cultural establishment is now selling to the public.</span></span></p><p></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:.5in;text-indent:.5in"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">[…..]</span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">The key idea is that for thirty years, the work of García Márquez, with its magical realism, represented Latin American literature in the imagination of the North American reader. But since everything tarnishes and ends up losing its luster, the cultural establishment eventually went looking for something new. It sounded out the guys in the literary groups called McOndo and Crack, but they didn’t fit the enterprise—above all, as Sarah Pollack explains, it was very difficult to sell the North American reader on the world of iPods and Nazi spy novels as the new image of Latin America and its literature. Then Bolaño appeared with his </span></span><i><span style="text-decoration:none;text-underline:nonecolor:windowtext;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">The Savage Detectives</span></span></span></i><span style="font-style:normal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> and his visceral realism.</span></span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">[…..]</span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">The stories and the brief novels of Bolaño were being published in the United States very carefully and tenaciously by New Directions, a very prestigious independent publisher with a modest distribution, when all of a sudden, in the middle of negotiations for </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">The Savage Detectives</span></span></i><span style="font-style:normal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">, appeared, like a bolt from the blue, the powerful hand of the landlords of fortune, who decided that this excellent novel was the work chosen to be the next big thing, the new </span></span></span><i><span style="text-decoration:none;text-underline:nonecolor:windowtext;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">One Hundred Years of Solitude</span></span></span></i><span style="font-style:normal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">, if you will. And it was written, what’s more, by an author who had died a little earlier, which facilitated the process of organizing the operation.</span></span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:.5in;text-indent:.5in"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">[…..]</span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">The novelty for the American reader is that he will come away with two complementary messages that appeal to his sensibility and expectations: on one side the novel evokes the “youthful idealism” that leads to rebellion and adventure. But on the other side, it can be read as a morality tale, in the sense that “it is very good to be a brazen rebel at sixteen years old, but if a person doesn’t grow and change into an adult person, serious and established, the consequences can be tragic and pathetic,” as in the case of Arturo Belano and Ulises Lima. Sarah Pollack concludes: “It is as if Bolaño were confirming what U.S. cultural norms tout as truth.”</span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">In other words, James Wood, as a functionary for the landlords of fortune in the publishing industry, was just serving his myth-making and marketing role in “confirming what U.S. cultural norms tout as truth.”<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">What I been sayin’ all along.</p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <!--EndFragment-->Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-46651024592998517232009-10-23T21:12:00.000-07:002009-10-23T21:41:33.506-07:00BAD PAPER: Bursting the 'Literary Fiction' Bubble<!--StartFragment--> <p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%"></p><span><span>by Edmond Caldwell</span></span><div><br /></div><div><span><span>(first printed as <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><a href="http://radicalnotes.com/journal/2009/10/17/correspondence-pamphlet-no-2-bad-paper/">Correspondence Pamphlet</a></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><a href="http://radicalnotes.com/journal/2009/10/17/correspondence-pamphlet-no-2-bad-paper/"> #2</a></span>, New Delhi, India, in August 2009) </span></span></div><div><br /></div><div><span><span>Part 1. </span></span></div><div><br /></div><div><span><span>In the early days of the current economic crisis, the Treasury Department demanded from the U.S. Congress a 700 billion-dollar bailout to buy up the “bad paper,” a term for all the junk assets owned by the banks and mortgage companies. <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">Bad paper</span> – the phrase is evocative, and one might be forgiven, while gazing at the stacks of unsold “bestsellers” on the display tables of the nearest Barnes & Noble, for imagining the CEOs of the Big Six publishing companies frantically scurrying to D.C. to demand their own big slice of bailout pie. After all, who could have more <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">bad paper</span> to unload than Random House, Simon & Schuster, HarperCollins Harcourt, the Time-Warner Book Group, the Penguin Group, and Macmillan? </span></span></div><div><br /></div><div><span><span>In the weeks that followed, the sub-prime mortgage crisis became a credit crisis, the credit crisis a financial crisis, the financial crisis an international economic crisis – until finally the d-word loomed. Through it all, that phrase continued to ring in my mind – <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">bad paper, bad paper, bad paper</span> . . . A huge bubble of paper claims on profits whose value was not based on any tangible, productive assets, on any “really-existing” capital, had finally popped – a bubble of “fictitious capital.” Fiction again! Come to think of it, didn’t the word “credit” itself come from <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">credare</span>, the Latin for “to believe,” as if the financial system operated by asking from us the same “willing suspension of disbelief” that fiction asks of its readers? What was this sudden, weird synergy between the economy and fiction? Maybe the veils were finally being torn away from both, and just as the economy was turning out to be a fiction, so contemporary fiction was turning to be – having plummeted from the airy realms of Art – a thing of squalid calculation. </span></span></div><div><br /></div><div><span><span>The crisis caught up with the publishing companies on 3 December 2008, a day which industry observers were soon calling Black Wednesday. Under the euphemism of a “staff reduction,” heads started to roll in all divisions of Simon & Schuster, while the Random House Group announced a major “restructuring,” consolidating less-profitable imprints in a move widely seen as a prelude to downsizing some of them and liquidating others. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt announced an unprecedented “buying freeze” – a hold on acquiring new manuscripts – and laid off a slew of employees, including several big-name editors. Not too many more days passed before Macmillan followed suit with big layoffs of its own. And the squeeze was being felt all down the line, affecting the distributors and major retailers as well, with the Border’s chain – Barnes & Noble’s main competitor – hemorrhaging money and foreseeing the shuttering of many of its stores and a radical “inventory reduction.” All of these euphemisms really pointed to one thing: unloading that bad paper. </span></span></div><div><br /></div><div><span><span>Crisis has a way of accelerating social processes already under way. People are now beginning to talk about the disappearance of the current publishing regime and its replacement by a different model, one based more, perhaps, on Publishing-on-Demand (POD) technologies and the spread of e-books and e-book readers such as Amazon’s Kindle. Whatever happens, it looks like a major change is in the offing, perhaps has even been developing – under our very noses, so to speak – for some time. As Gramsci once wrote, “The crisis consists precisely in the fact that the old is dying and the new cannot be born; in this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.” Given that we are in such an interregnum, what morbid symptoms can we diagnose in the field of literature? </span></span><div style="mso-element:footnote-list"><br /><div style="mso-element:footnote" id="ftn1"> </div> </div><div style="text-align: center;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:large;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">full text of "Bad Paper" </span></span><a href="http://radicalnotes.com/journal/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/Correspondence-2.pdf"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:large;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">here</span></span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:large;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"> </span></span></div><div style="text-align: center;">(and thanks to Anirudh Karnick & <a href="http://correspondence-delhi.blogspot.com/">Correspondence</a>)</div> <!--EndFragment--> </div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-5111676375778531842009-09-29T19:31:00.001-07:002009-10-03T14:52:49.648-07:00List Lust, or, The Banalities (Updated)<div><!--StartFragment--> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">Recently a literary blog or site or whatever calling itself <i><a href="http://www.themillions.com/">The Millions</a></i></span><span style="color:black;"> posted for the edification and entertainment of its readers a <a href="http://www.themillions.com/2009/09/best-of-the-millennium-pros-versus-readers.html">list</a> of “The Best Fiction of the Millennium (So Far).”<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>The judging-process was set up along American Idol lines – a panel of literary Simon Cowells and Paula Abduls coupled with a poll of the faceless audience, culled from Facebook.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span></span></p> <p class="MsoBodyText2">The resulting lists generated the type of discussion that you would expect:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>expressions of pleasure over the presence of favorite titles along with much quibbling about who was left off – behavior which, essentially, reproduces the work of the list itself, “playing along” even where the participant has differences over this or that selection.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">Therefore I was happy when at least one litblog commentator, Andrew Seal, sounded like he was going to go beyond mere participation in the spectacle.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>As he wrote in a September 25 <a href="http://www.blographia-literaria.com/2009/09/millions-list-judging-judges.html">post</a>:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span></span></p> <p class="MsoBodyText"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">“The inclusions and placements of the list are not really worth quibbling about, and itemizing the good books that were left off is about as easy as falling off a log.</span><span style="mso-spacerun: yes"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"> </span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">I'm not really interested in specifics, because there's a much bigger issue which the list raises—”</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">Ah, I thought, now we’re getting somewhere!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>He continues:</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;"><i>“—if ordered lists like this must exist, to whom should we be listening to fill them?”</i></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">Oh.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>A critique of the make-up of the celebrity-judges panel, in Andrew’s view too heavily skewed to young and US-based creative writers, with not enough critics, editors, and academics, so that perhaps the panel was too narrow or not expert enough.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>He may or may not be right on that score, but we haven’t gotten to any “much bigger issues” yet if we’ve just moved from quibbling about the selection of books to quibbling about the selection of judges.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>That’s playing the same game at one remove, when what we need to do to get to “bigger issues” is to examine the game itself.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">For starters, let’s not neglect the way that the list itself – and in fact the whole game of this and other literary lists – was “pre-judged” to begin with, and by an even bigger and more influential arbiter of taste and culture than writers, critics, editors, and academics:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>corporate sales and publicity departments.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">Publishing is currently dominated by the “Big Six” media corporations:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>the Random House Group (owned by the Bertelsmann corporation), Simon & Schuster (owned by ViaCom), HarperCollins Harcourt (Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation), the Penguin Group (Pearson), Macmillan (Holtzbrinck), and the Time-Warner Book Group.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>The readers polled by <i>The Millions</i></span><span style="color:black;"> – whether the “pros” of the first panel or the Common Readers of the second panel – are making their judgments based on an array that has already been selected and set before them, largely by this corporate monopoly.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">How largely?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span><i>The Millions</i></span><span style="color:black;">’ lists pretty much reflect the market share.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Of the 30 titles represented on the two lists (20 titles in each list, with 10 overlapping), 27 are published by imprints belonging to 5 of the Big Six conglomerates, leaving a whopping 3 titles published by “independent” houses.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>In other words about 90% of the titles come from the corporate majors.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>That’s interesting, isn’t it?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>And here I thought the list was supposed to reflect “quality” and “taste”!<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>If Andrew Seal is disturbed by the fact that 70% of the judges are young U.S.-based creative writers, what kind of response does this 90% figure merit?</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">Of the 27 corporate offerings, Random House/Bertelsmann wins big with 14 titles – almost half the list – and runner-up goes to Macmillan/Holtzbrinck, with 8.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>Penguin/Pearson comes in third with 3 titles, while Simon & Schuster/ViaCom and HarperCollins Harcourt/News Corporation get 1 each.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>The independent presses are represented by Bloomsbury (Susanna Clarke’s <i>Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell</i></span><span style="color:black;">), Soft Skull (Lynne Tillman’s <i>American Genius</i></span><span style="color:black;">), and Small Beer Press (Kelly Link’s <i>Stranger Things Happen</i></span><span style="color:black;">).<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">Of course the picture is a little more nuanced than this.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>On the indie side, Bloomsbury can hardly be considered a plucky, against-the-odds upstart – they’re the fifth largest house in the UK, having made a dime or two over some boy-magician franchise.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>On the corporate side, Farrar Straus & Giroux, while now owned by Macmillan, still has a lot of indie street cred, as does the author of the FSG title on the list, Lydia Davis.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>And while Sebald’s <i>Austerlitz</i></span><span style="color:black;"> and Bolano’s <i>2666</i></span><span style="color:black;"> are both published by imprints belonging to majors (Random House and Macmillan), the works of these authors first had to “make their way” in the independents (New Directions) before being sharked up by the bigger fish.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">Someone might even argue that this proves that “quality” can still win through in today’s corporate publishing environment, that the sales and publicity departments sometimes respond to genuine demand, that the “bottom line” doesn’t rule everything, etc.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>After all, Random House is hardly publishing Sebald because he’s performing like Dan Brown.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>In other words we can still separate questions of quality and the making of discrete literary judgments from a general critique of “literature” as an institution (so that we can all safely go back to being consumers and spectators).<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">But as far as Random House is concerned, Sebald is just the other side of the Dan Brown coin.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>The type of commodity the majors produce still relies (although less so than in previous decades) on a varnish of “literariness,” and having a Sebald or a Bolano on the list serves, for this season at least, as the incidental guarantor.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>Nobody is making the argument that the books on <i>The Millions</i></span><span style="color:black;">’<i> </i></span><span style="color:black;">lists and the millions of lists like them are “really all just crap.”<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Rather, the genuinely good or interesting or significant books that make their fitful appearance alongside the middling mediocrities by McEwan, Lethem, Eugenides, Russo et al. are there in a way that is tokenistic and totemistic.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>As totems they vicariously impart their aura of quality and seriousness to the larger pool of mediocrities and hence to the field as a whole (ah, literature!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>The “higher things!”<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Or as James Wood would ejaculate, “the soul!”), and what the publishers might sacrifice in profit they gain back in cachet, an ostensible “relevance,” and credibility with the high end of their audience.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>As tokens, however, such titles relieve publishers of the costly burden of being actually in the business of bringing readers quality fiction in any but this most limited way.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Bolano now “stands for” Latin American Literature, and if a few further interesting Latin American authors make it into translation and out of the independents into the majors for the next five years it will be on the strength of “<i>If you liked</i></span><span style="color:black;"> Savage Detectives, <i>you’ll LOVE _______!!!</i></span><span style="color:black;">”<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Similarly, W.G. Sebald “stands for” a kind of overcast Mittel-European “high seriousness” and fills a Survivor Porn niche, </span>Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie grabs the Nigerian-of-the-Decade baton from Ben Okri, and <span style="color:black;">so on.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span><i>Austerlitz</i></span><span style="color:black;"> and <i>2666</i></span><span style="color:black;"> are good books brought to us in a way that sucks the oxygen out of the type of atmosphere in which good books might be much more broadly produced, understood, and enjoyed.<a style="mso-footnote-id:ftn1" href="http://www.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=4951486642731990675&postID=511167637577853184#_ftn1" name="_ftnref1" title=""><span class="MsoFootnoteReference"><span style="mso-special-character:footnote">[1]</span></span></a><span style="mso-spacerun: yes"><span style="color:black;"> To come up with Best Books lists in this environment is little more than an exercise in pecking the least maggoty bits from carrion.</span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">But the listing and ranking game goes on – and on and on – as if all sectors of society were afflicted with a kind of mass obsessive-compulsive disorder or species of autism.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>“<i>If ordered lists like this must exist</i></span><span style="color:black;">,” stipulates Andrew Seal – but why <i>must</i></span><span style="color:black;"> they?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Why should we submit to such fatalism?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Where do these lists come from, whom do they benefit, and what ultimate ideological function do they serve?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">Back in January I addressed this topic in a <a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2009/01/best-dressed-books-of-2008.html">post</a> called “The Best-Dressed Books of 2008,” and I’ll stand by what I wrote there:<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><span style="color:black;">The end of the old year and the beginning of the new one – yes, it’s the season of those tiresome, compulsory Best of! and Top Ten! lists, including, alas, ‘literary’ lists. These bullet-point bonanzas are the expression of a marketing sensibility, which means that book-lists bear the same relationship to literature as a Hallmark Valentine does to love. Yet participation in this annual ritual serves to reinforce certain ideological practices that are crucial to the reproduction of the current culture. Here – for your post-holiday pleasure – are the top five ideological practices these lists reinforce:</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.25in;text-indent:-.25in;mso-list:l5 level1 lfo6;tab-stops:list 1.25in"><span style="font-family:Symbol;color:black;">·<span style="font:7.0pt "Times New Roman""> </span></span><span style="color:black;">the fashion-system (obsession with small differences in the context of a large but unremarked sameness; the importance of being “up-to-date,” of knowing what the “trends” tell us about our irresistibly fascinating selves, etc.)</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.25in;text-indent:-.25in;mso-list:l5 level1 lfo6;tab-stops:list 1.25in"><span style="font-family:Symbol;color:black;">·<span style="font:7.0pt "Times New Roman""> </span></span><span style="color:black;">the star-system (which items are common to most lists? which item will “win”?)</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.25in;text-indent:-.25in;mso-list:l5 level1 lfo6;tab-stops:list 1.25in"><span style="font-family:Symbol;color:black;">·<span style="font:7.0pt "Times New Roman""> </span></span><span style="color:black;">the construction of a social and personal identity as the sum of market choices</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.25in;text-indent:-.25in;mso-list:l5 level1 lfo6;tab-stops:list 1.25in"><span style="font-family:Symbol;color:black;">·<span style="font:7.0pt "Times New Roman""> </span></span><span style="color:black;">manifest populism (anyone can do it – it’s fun! Who’s on your list?)</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.25in;text-indent:-.25in;mso-list:l5 level1 lfo6;tab-stops:list 1.25in"><span style="font-family:Symbol;color:black;">·<span style="font:7.0pt "Times New Roman""> </span></span><span style="color:black;">latent elitism (the last word goes to the cultural arbiters)</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><span style="color:black;">There’s a spectrum, however, and some types of lists are more honest about functioning in the above terms (Best Dressed/Worst Dressed, for example) while others are more dishonest about it (Best Books lists). Generally, the higher up the scale of cultural “quality,” the greater the dishonesty.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="color:black;">With that in mind, here’s the winner of the “The Best Fiction of the New Millennium (So Far).”<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Look, you can see your own reflection on the shiny surface!</span></p><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEipvF8u76kzhA8G0UsLuFq1DsbrnglIGn2wv0Pt5cd6IzUbhuEJZGAvYWW_7KRzJ2jqHKFjiUvSG6jU1Lp0zSXFepPjpZRwsUW4vs7NrbE8Kp1fFV1p8wvuxo7rBr0PVF-jdI5yB1npu1rj/s1600-h/Random-house2.jpg"><img src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEipvF8u76kzhA8G0UsLuFq1DsbrnglIGn2wv0Pt5cd6IzUbhuEJZGAvYWW_7KRzJ2jqHKFjiUvSG6jU1Lp0zSXFepPjpZRwsUW4vs7NrbE8Kp1fFV1p8wvuxo7rBr0PVF-jdI5yB1npu1rj/s400/Random-house2.jpg" border="0" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5387082908518850162" style="display: block; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: auto; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: auto; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 235px; height: 400px; " /></a> <span style="mso-ansi-language:EN-US;font-family:Times;font-size:12.0pt;color:black;"><div style="text-align: center;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:x-small;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:x-small;">Random House Towers, New York.</span><br /></span></div><div style="text-align: left;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><br /></span></div><div style="text-align: left;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">UPDATE:</span></span></div><div style="text-align: left;"></div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"><div><br /></div>Some excellent additional points from Helen DeWitt at <a href="http://paperpools.blogspot.com/2009/09/lists.html">paperpools</a>:</span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" ;font-family:Times;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span style="mso-ansi-language:EN-US;font-family:Times;color:black;"><span><span><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'trebuchet ms';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">I got an email a while back from The Millions asking me to nominate my top 5 books for the new millennium, with the following constraints: they must be fiction, they must be available in English. The idea was, The Millions would then tabulate all votes and come up with a top 20.<br /><br />So. If some of the most interesting writing I've read has been in a blog, or a pdf, or a webcomic, or just in emails, I can't mention it - it has to be writing that been legitimised by a book deal. Also, if I've read someone brilliant in a language other than English - someone who hasn't happened to sell English-language rights - I can't mention that either. So I can't use this to give interesting writers a better chance of attracting notice and getting an English-language book deal, I just have to endorse the status quo. <br /><br />Well, let's say I play the game and I just pick 5 novels published in English since 2000; I might still think this was a chance to draw attention to undeservedly neglected writers. Fact is, it can't work that way.<br /><br />The only writers who stand any chance of making it into the top 20 are going to be writers a significant number of other contributors have also noticed - which means they are wildly unlikely to come from the undeservedly neglected. They will come from the pool of writers who got promoted, who won acclaim, in other words from the much smaller pool of writers many of us have happened to hear of.</span></span></span></span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'trebuchet ms';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> </span></span></span></span></span><div style="text-align: left;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" line-height: 22px; font-family:'Trebuchet MS';"></span><br /></span></div></span><div style="mso-element:footnote-list">And over at <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">Blographia Literaria</span>, Andrew takes <a href="http://www.blographia-literaria.com/2009/09/little-more-on-millions-list.html">umbrage</a>.</div><div style="mso-element:footnote-list"><br /></div><div style="mso-element:footnote-list"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"></span></div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">UPDATE 2:</span><br /><br /></span></span></div><div><span><span>A couple of great quotes from Chad Post on the restrictions of corporate publishing in the US when it comes to writers in translation (<a href="http://www.conversationalreading.com/2009/09/bolano-versus-crack.html">via</a> Scott Esposito at <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">Conversational Reading</span>). Here's the first, an instance of what I called "tokenism" above:<br /><br /></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'trebuchet ms';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">Post-Garcia Marquez, it’s been near impossible for a non-magical realist from south of our borders to get published in America. A certain Isabel Allende-tainted vision of what “counted” as good Latin American literature came into being, and anything that didn’t fit that mold wasn’t marketable.</span></span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'trebuchet ms';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><br /></span></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'trebuchet ms';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">The “Crack group” (Jorge Volpi, Eloy Urroz, Ignacio Padilla, etc.) rose up as a response to this situation, this sort of pre-marketing that filters out certain types of literature in favor of more “marketable” books. And it would be foolish to pretend that marketing doesn’t play a role in which authors get published—especially in translation</span>.</span></span></span></span></div><div><br /></div><div><span><span>But hey, <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">100 Years of Solitude </span>made it onto a lot of "Best Books" list in the meantime, and we should just be happy with that, right? Here's the second quote of Chad's:<br /><br /><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'trebuchet ms';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">A good example of American publishing arrogance is what Scott Moyers said about W. G. Sebald on a “buzz panel” a few years back. I wrote about this at the time but his comment about how Sebald had been “getting his name out there a bit” thanks to New Directions, but that it was Random House’s publication of Austerlitz that put the “stamp of authority” on Sebald as one of Europe’s great writers still makes me vomit in my mouth a little bit.</span></span></span><br /><br />Yeah, I know the feeling.</span></span><div style="mso-element:footnote-list"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: rgb(51, 51, 51); line-height: 19px; font-family:times;font-size:14px;"><p style="margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; text-align: left; "><br /></p></span></div><div style="mso-element:footnote-list"><hr align="left" size="1" width="33%"> <div style="mso-element:footnote" id="ftn1"> <p class="MsoFootnoteText"><a style="mso-footnote-id:ftn1" href="http://www.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=4951486642731990675&postID=511167637577853184#_ftnref1" name="_ftn1" title=""><span class="MsoFootnoteReference"><span style="mso-special-character:footnote"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">[1]</span></span></span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> </span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">And to produce such an atmosphere, such oxygen?</span><span style="mso-spacerun: yes"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> </span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">A necessary basis would be a more equitable and democratic mode of producing and distributing society’s resources (including in the fields of cultural production).</span><span style="mso-spacerun:yes"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> </span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">And as its corollary:</span><span style="mso-spacerun: yes"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> </span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">a system of education that aims to do something more and other than transform a third of the population into professional-managerial bureaucrats, a third into service-sector wage slaves, and a third into prisoners.</span></span></p></div></div></div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-44363246985501536552009-09-15T08:38:00.001-07:002009-09-15T09:00:03.494-07:00A Review of “How Fiction Works” and Just About Everything Else<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhTTiHnAEos8y4Qw78mTOpQ5GQCvx4WcwzoUA_aDHWr1xy_9uxvnUE0usD0YHyc4OT1nFosK2Qh-9Bt2u1vaNc2eZ3JdorxSy7JQO74i8JRK21JU6J7OVb4ZBTtm3lp4ryAm07YRLn0ERgS/s1600-h/8993565.Nauman_ClownTortureClownTakingAShit.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 267px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhTTiHnAEos8y4Qw78mTOpQ5GQCvx4WcwzoUA_aDHWr1xy_9uxvnUE0usD0YHyc4OT1nFosK2Qh-9Bt2u1vaNc2eZ3JdorxSy7JQO74i8JRK21JU6J7OVb4ZBTtm3lp4ryAm07YRLn0ERgS/s400/8993565.Nauman_ClownTortureClownTakingAShit.jpg" border="0" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5381720814792927346" /></a><p class="MsoNormal">I realize I’ve been remiss – here James Wood’s <i>How Fiction Works</i><span style="font-style:normal"> has been out in paperback for weeks now and I haven’t posted anything to mark the occasion!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>And it reminds me of my remissness on another score:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>that here amid all the piss-taking I’ve never really offered a </span><i>positive</i><span style="font-style:normal"> example of what genuine, serious literary criticism “at the present time” should be.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Fortunately I find that I’m able to kill both those carrion at one throw and get back to the other much more important and interesting things that have been occupying me lately.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>I’m reposting, in full, the splendid September 14 <a href="http://fafblog.blogspot.com/2009/09/storytime.html">offering</a> at <a href="http://fafblog.blogspot.com/">Fafblog</a>.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>I just found out about this blog (thanks, comrade <a href="http://staugustine2.wordpress.com/2009/09/07/the-endless-thread-2-0/#comment-843">Augustine</a>), don’t know anything about the blogger, and doubt that the post was written as any kind of direct response to Wood, but I immediately recognized how well it works as a review of <i>How Fiction Works</i><span style="font-style:normal">, and in fact of Joseph O’Neill’s </span><i>Nitherland</i><span style="font-style:normal"> or </span><i>Netherparts</i><span style="font-style:normal"> or whatever it was and Ian McEwan’s </span><i>Saturday</i><span style="font-style:normal"> and Claire Messud’s </span><i>The Emperor’s Children</i><span style="font-style:normal"> and for that matter just about any work of contemporary “literary fiction” as well as pretty much all the “criticism” and reviews you’ll read in venues like </span><i>New Yorker</i><span style="font-style:normal">, </span><i>The New Republic, Entertainment Weekly</i><span style="font-style:normal">, </span><i>Etcetera, Ad Nauseam</i><span style="font-style:normal"> …</span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">We need less like that, and more like this:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal" align="center" style="text-align:center"><span style="text-decoration:none;text-underline:nonecolor:windowtext;"><a href="http://fafblog.blogspot.com/2009/09/storytime.html"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=""><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: medium;">storytime</span></span></span></span></a></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=""><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></span></span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style=""><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"></span></span></p><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">"Once upon a time there was a fafnir and a giblets, and their names were Fafnir and Giblets," says me. </span></span></span></span><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">"Giblets can't relate to these characters," says Giblets. "Who do they come from and where are they going and what are their hopes and their dreams and their dark and buried pasts? Giblets demands backstory!" </span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">"And they were pirates and spacemen and industrial chemical mixers who sailed the sea and tilled the land to get the girl and win the big game and ride the road of truth and self-discovery and of course the American Dream," says me. </span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">"Giblets does not believe in this story," says Giblets. "Where is the dirt and the dust and the gritty grainy gunk of the everyday? Giblets demands verisimilitude!" </span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">"And they dragged their straw-thatched huts and their earthenware mules and remembered the sweet-smelling spices and the warm baked bread of Grandma Stolchi's industrial meat-packing plant," says me. </span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">"Giblets is uninspired," says Giblets. "Where is the greatness and the grandeur and the daring doing of deedly deeds? Giblets demands a sense of the epic!" </span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">"And the mountains crunched and the thunder groaned and the wind and the war and the singing of songs and the angry angry sea," says me. </span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">"Giblets is detached," says Giblets. "Where is the warmth of the heart of the fiery fires of the human experience? Giblets demands more feeling!" </span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">"And though their love was deep and fierce and right and true it was doomed from the start," says me, "for she was only a lowly scullery maid, and he had been trampled to death by elephants." </span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">"Giblets is confused," says Giblets. "Where is this going and what does it mean and how does it contribute to the advancement of the art of American letters? Giblets demands a theory of storytime!" </span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">"And they all lived happily ever after," says me, "except for the ones who were squashed or exploded or eaten by bees." </span></span></span></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span><span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">"Tell me another one," says Giblets.</span></span></span></span><p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"></span></span></span></p> <!--EndFragment--></div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-29421494626890266732009-07-03T12:39:00.000-07:002009-07-03T13:04:38.122-07:00And James Wood Shall Lead Them<div><br /></div>China Mieville on the "LitFic Praetorians":<div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-weight: bold;">**************</span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: rgb(51, 51, 51); line-height: 18px; font-family:verdana;font-size:12px;"><p style="margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; "><strong>iii) LitFic Praetorians</strong></p><p style="margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; ">Every new mess mainstream politics and culture gets us into should be its last, but never understimate its staying power. It's an ironclad, and the burgeoning econopocalypse, despite causing a little wobble here and there, is not yet putting paid to it. For the novel, this will be illustrated by a declaration of war by the lions of good taste against those sceptical of its claims to investigate the contours of The Human Condition (tm), or some such.</p><p style="margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; ">Unlike much previous soi disant Literary Fiction, the LitFic Praetorians will understand i) that they are a genre among many, ii) that their esteemed position is under attack. And they will decide to take the fight to the enemy.</p><p style="margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; ">Accordingly, this movement will continue to privilege those aspects of fiction that have come, for some, to be the sine qua non of literature itself -- a celebration of 'interiority' and a particular propagandist conception of 'character'; a prose that claims to be 'spare' and 'precise'; a striving for a horizon of metaphor to perfectly express some 'human truth' in terms of a more concrete thing (crockery, paint, a particular animal, a meteorological condition, etc, preferably referred to in the book's title); a dynamic of artful recognition; and so on. However, unlike its less self-conscious predecessors, it will do so overtly, courageously taking the battle to exteriority, militancy, estrangement and alienation, and aggressively foregrounding its concerns on such seemingly unfriendly literary turf.</p><p style="margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; ">Thus, for example, the redemptive power of art will be affirmed in the bloody imperial rubble of Iraq; musings on the melancholy of age and the rediscovery of life-affirmation in the arms of somewhat younger women will unfold before a backdrop of polemical dream-logic; and poignant stories of family betrayal and infidelity among academics will be set during alien invasions.</p><p style="margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; ">Influences include all winners of the Booker prize, particularly Ian McEwan, particularly his book -- claimed by the school as its foundational text -- Saturday.</p><p style="margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; "><em>What to say:</em> 'Great literature transcends everyday concerns.'</p><p style="margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; "><em>What not to say:</em> '"Literary Fiction" is a marketing category.</p><p style="margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; ">'</p><p style="text-align: center;margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" font-weight: bold;font-family:georgia;font-size:16px;">**************</span></p><p style="margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: georgia;"><br /></span></p><p style="margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">From Mieville's guest-blog post at <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;">Omnivoracious</span>, "<a href="http://www.omnivoracious.com/2009/06/neither-a-contract-nor-a-promise-five-movements-to-watch-out-for.html">Neither a Contract nor a Promise: Five Movements to Watch Out For</a>," which he offers as "a few modest proposals . . . to fulfil the moment's cultural needs."</span></span></p><p style="margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;">Via <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><a href="http://benjaminwhitmer.com/index.php/2009/06/china-mieville/">Kick Him, Honey</a></span></span></span></p><p style="margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; "><br /></p></span></div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-25164507431015106752009-03-31T13:21:00.000-07:002009-03-31T13:25:03.817-07:00A Reader Points Me the Right Wray<span class="Apple-style-span" style=" ;font-family:'times new roman';"><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"><br /></span></span></div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:georgia;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: Georgia; ">First-time reader, first-time caller here; just discovered your Contra James Wood blog and really enjoy it. I've had issues with Wood ever since a particularly pompous English lecturer I had in college -- a very limited aesthete, who used to devote whole sessions to reasons why Dickens shouldn't have had the third-person narrative in Bleak House, for example, because he found it gaudy and tiresome -- held him up as THE model of fine criticism. I think your points are sound and your mission very welcome, and I hope that your blog is a bellwether of where Wood's reputation and influence is heading. (One thing I do wish you'd talk more about is what a poor stylist he is: his locutions (awkward and unnatural) and metaphors (somehow both banal and outlandish) render a lot of his readings indecipherable, bizarre given his reputation for fine points and attention to detail, and I can't think of another critic who writes this poorly in quite this vein, which is like 10th rate Stephen Dedalus or something, all elliptical riddling with little philosophical subtlety and a frankly baffling deafness to the register and feel of individual words.) </span></span></span></span><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" ;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:medium;"><br />Since I don't want Wood's defenders to have any easy targets, however, I wanted to correct what I think are a few mistaken assumptions in your most recent review of John Wray. First, Wood is actually doing a good job of 'participating in the literary culture of his time' by reviewing this book, and he may well be ahead of the pack on this novel. Wray has written two very good books that didn't command a broad audience because they suffered from a lack of narrative force / compelling story, but he won a number of awards and was tagged by better critics than Wood as a promising young writer. With this book he's finally found something that can showcase his gifts as an author while telling an engaging story, and as such his publisher (FSG) has decided to push the book: he's already done a couple of fun, stagey readings in Manhattan, and 'Lowboy' is Amazon's book of the month for March 2009. From a publicity standpoint -- if not a literary one -- the decision by the publishers to recall Trainspotting in the book design and advertisements is wise, given how much cultural attention that book got, and I think/hope Wray gets his due here: this is one of the more interesting new books I've read in the last two or three years. <br /><br />Second, you seem to take Wood at his word that 'Atmospheric Disturbances' is superior to 'Lowboy', which I think couldn't be further from the case. (Wood's notion that 'Lowboy' breaks no new ground is way off.) The fact that Wood champions 'AD' should actually be good fodder for your contention that he's 'posturing' -- trying to appear balanced and broad-minded by praising an experimental, postmodern novel. He comes off as a pretty careless posturer here, in my view, as 'AD' is a very contentional, derivative, ultimately worthless book that essentially borrows a premise from "The Echo Maker", a plot from Muñoz Molina's "En Ausencia de Blanca" and everything else from Pynchon's "Crying of Lot 49". The funny thing about 'AD', given Wood's obsession with narrative accuracy, is that the gaping discrepancy between the voice of the putative narrator and the voice of the author -- it is just too obvious that a 35-year old urban female/literary careerist wrote this thing, not the middle-aged male Jewish psychiatrist who supposedly narrates it. Lots of knowing references to Borges, static literary devices, and this particularly obtrusive prose poetry (lots of silky metaphors and use of very specific colors ('cornsilk blond hair', 'a little russet dog', etc.)) that reminds me of those first-person male cowboys in Annie Proulx's work who compare sunsets to shades of mascara, then ponder precisely which mascara word is most beautifully true. I'm more flexible on credible voice in a narrative than Wood is, but even I found Galchen's clumsiness unbearable, and could hardly read the book. Anyway, for further proof that most sensible readers seemed to just not like this book, check the customer reviews at Amazon, the non-professional (read: non-compromised) reviews at Goodreads, the skeptical dismissal at the Complete Review, and the best review, by a favorite reviewer of mine, Adam Kirsch in the New York Sun. Lots of the negative reviews come from fans of Pynchon and Foster Wallace, which seems to show that people more sensitive to postmodernism than Wood think this book is a failure, making his advocacy of it particularly head-scratching. Probably has more to do with the fact that she teaches at Columbia and is 'in' with NY literateurs; shades of Wood's dedications to Bellow and Norman Rush. <br /><br />That's it from me. Keep up the good work!</span></span></div>Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4951486642731990675.post-66169704457921878172009-03-24T12:49:00.000-07:002009-03-25T19:17:21.866-07:00Slouching Towards Irrelevance<!--StartFragment--> <p class="MsoNormal">So James Wood has <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2009/03/30/090330crbo_books_wood">returned</a> to the pages of the <i>New Yorker </i><span style="font-style:normal">after a hiatus of almost three and a half months.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Perhaps his employer had been keeping him at a discreet distance for the duration of the official John Updike <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/talk/2009/02/09/090209ta_talk_gopnik">obsequies</a> (with a little DFW <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/03/09/090309fa_fact_max">grave-robbing</a> thrown in).<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Whatever the case, Wood has resurfaced at an opportune moment, coinciding with the appearance of two important literary works (one controversially so):<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Jonathan Littell’s </span><i><a href="http://this-space.blogspot.com/2009/03/kindly-ones-by-jonathan-littell.html">The Kindly Ones</a></i><span style="font-style:normal"> and the first volume of Samuel Beckett’s <a href="http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/the_tls/article5885981.ece">correspondence</a>.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>So what book has Wood chosen for his auspiciously-timed return?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><i>Lowboy</i><span style="font-style:normal">, a novel by John Wray.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Or as his name is alternately spelled:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>W-h-o?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Of course I’m always willing to admit when I’ve been unduly nasty, and I’ll do so right here:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>What I just wrote is unnecessarily mean to John Wray.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>But I did it, like I always do (my barbs are never gratuitous), to make a point.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>You would think that a reviewer of Wood’s ostensible stature would want to participate in, and try to shape, the literary culture of his or her times.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>That’s what an actual critic would do, and indeed that’s what Wood himself tried to do with his misguided and incoherent diatribes against so-called “hysterical realism.”<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>If these had the feel of a media-manufactured “moral panic,” that’s because that is basically what they were:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Wood created a peril and then rushed to our rescue.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Wood also bravely championed W.G. Sebald and Roberto <a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2009/01/gutless-realism-james-woods-housebroken.html">Bolaño</a> when everyone else in the profession was either ignoring or dismissing their works, single-handedly bringing those authors to the attention of grateful readers from a lonely perch on his bandwagon of one while his book-reviewing peers and the whole publishing industry howled in derision or turned their backs.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>In light of these past heroics his current choice of Wray’s novel can only look like hesitation, or timidity.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">It’s a modest review of what Wood concludes is a modestly accomplished work.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Wray’s story of an escaped paranoid schizophrenic riding the New York subway breaks no new ground, and Wood himself acknowledges having recently <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2008/06/23/080623crbo_books_wood">reviewed</a> a better book – Rivka Galchen’s <i>Atmospheric Disturbances</i><span style="font-style:normal"> – that takes up similar themes.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>So why review this one now – because it turned up in the in-box?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Instead of convincing us of the necessity of this particular notice, however, Wood ends up lamenting the book it might have been, and it’s here that the review takes on its most characteristically Woodish convolutions.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Commending the way that Wray subsumes his non-fiction sources in the creation of his protagonist, Wood writes:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span></span></p><!--StartFragment--> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><span style="font-family:Arial;font-size:10.0pt;">Yet those sources also unhelpfully remind one of the novel’s weakness, which is precisely that it is about “a paranoid schizophrenic,” explicitly flagged as such by the publisher, rather than about someone who is losing his mind, as, say, Knut Hamsun’s “Hunger” and Thomas Bernhard’s “Concrete” are about people losing their minds. Books like Hamsun’s and Bernhard’s exult in the unreadable, the indecipherable.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>“Lowboy” is exceptionally tender and acute, but it is at times in danger of falling into the legible stability of case history, in which the reader might check off recognizable symptoms, usefully assisted by the subject’s mother, who is on hand to provide the necessary background information, and validated by the acknowledged medical sources. John Wray is a daring young writer, highly praised for his last two novels (both historical, and both unlike each other), and yet his third novel is, for all its boldness, also a bit conventional. An early review quoted on the book’s cover likens it to Dostoyevsky, but “Lowboy” lacks the bountiful inefficiency of “Crime and Punishment” or “The Devils.” The book is less bold, less playfully demanding, than Rivka Galchen’s recent novel, “Atmospheric Disturbances,” which explores a similar mental deviancy from what Galchen wickedly calls “a consensus view of reality.”</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left:1.0in"><span style="font-family:Arial;font-size:10.0pt;">Instead, “Lowboy” performs a strange two-step: whenever Will is at the center of the novel, the narration vigorously stretches itself; but the alternate chapters, in which Violet and Lateef give chase, squeeze the book back into conventionality. These scenes are elegantly done, and are often moving, but they seem, by comparison with Will’s experimental story, unchallengingly realist.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Along with this passage’s mention of Hamsun, Bernhard, and Dostoevsky, Wood elsewhere makes comparisons to Kafka, Murakami, and Harold Pinter.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>In such a short essay it’s a rather pressured assembling of major figures with anti-realist street cred, and it would border on non sequitur if the agenda weren’t hovering so near.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Wood’s approval of <i>Lowboy</i><span style="font-style:normal"> is staged in the shadow of writers who “exult in the unreadable, the indecipherable,” and by comparison Wray’s book is taxed with being too “conventional” and “unchallengingly realist” in places, and insufficiently “experimental.”</span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">This is posturing, and it should call to mind the disinterred 1994 <i>Guardian</i><span style="font-style:normal"> list (discussed in my previous <a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2009/03/magic-beans.html">post</a>) that Wood’s <a href="http://marksarvas.blogs.com/elegvar/2009/02/james-woods-best-books-since-1945-circa-1994.html">pet</a> <a href="http://nigelbeale.com/2009/02/sarvas-gives-us-james-woods-favourite-books-list/">rocks</a> were holding up a few weeks ago as some kind of definitive demonstration of the breadth and variety of the reviewer’s tastes (“Pynchon!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Barthelme!<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>DeLillo!” panted Mark Sarvas).<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>As I said at the time, what counts is not the citation of this or that name but the </span><i>way of reading</i><span style="font-style:normal"> the critic or reviewer deploys, and nothing in the actual track record of Wood’s reviews shows any fundamental sympathy with the kind of fiction these authors wrote; in fact what we find is antipathy.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>The same holds true for the reviewer’s current citation of Thomas Bernhard:<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>there just aren’t that many points of contact between the aesthetic protocols articulated in </span><i>How Fiction Works</i><span style="font-style:normal"> and Bernhard’s <a href="http://thechagallposition.blogspot.com/2008/12/thomas-bernhards-report.html">annihilations</a> of the novel.*<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>In Wood’s <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2008/06/23/080623crbo_books_wood">review</a> of </span><i>Atmospheric Disturbances</i><span style="font-style:normal"> he acknowledges Galchen’s debt to Bernhard, but ultimately reads her novel not as an “exultation” in “the unreadable” and “the indecipherable,” but as “a novel of consciousness,” i.e., yet another ratification of his cookie-cutter <a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2008/12/function-of-humanism-at-present-time.html">humanism</a>.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Figures such as Kafka and Dostoevsky (whose </span><i>The Devils</i><span style="font-style:normal"> is, if anything, “hysterical realism” </span><i>avant la lettre</i><span style="font-style:normal">) have the sanction of time; they are canonical, and Wood’s readings of canonical figures rarely challenge their status.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>If it’s Pynchon he’s writing about, we learn that allegory is unacceptable in the novel; if it’s Melville, allegory is suddenly OK.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Similarly, “paranoid vision” and the novel-form are inimical when DeLillo’s </span><i>Underworld</i><span style="font-style:normal"> is on the stand, but Dostoevsky and Kafka (no “paranoid vision” in those two, right?) enjoy an unconditional amnesty.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>And when Toni Morrison is under review, magical occurrences in fiction are out of bounds and even “<a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2009/02/critic-as-cracker-james-woods-sister.html">a moral problem</a>,” but when Gogol does it it’s different, because he’s, er, well . . . Gogol.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">But for the moment let’s take Wood at his word, because he rarely postures without purpose.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>He says he wants a more “experimental” and less “conventional” novel than the one that Wray, in parts, has produced?<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>Something more along the lines of, say, Knut Hamsun?<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Well then, let’s turn to Wood’s 1998 <a href="http://www.lrb.co.uk/v20/n23/wood02_.html">essay</a> on Hamsun, later reprinted in <i>The Broken Estate,</i><span style="font-style:normal"> and see what he has to say there. Although<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Hamsun’s characters "are tissues of fictionality," Wood asserts, “they <span style="color:black;">are not tediously weightless, or unreal, in the way that we know from the </span></span><span style="color:black;"><i>nouveau roman</i></span><span style="color:black;"> or other avant-gardisms.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>They would never say, ‘I am fictional, I was created by Knut Hamsun’.”<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>In this deeply philistine remark whole swathes of unconventional, “experimental” literature are dismissed with a truculently populist wave of a hand.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Not only dismissed, but misrepresented:<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> T</span>hat particular type of “I’m-the-fictional-creation-of-author-X” narratorial self-consciousness is hardly representative of the work of the main exemplars of the <i>nouveau roman</i></span><span style="color:black;">, of Sarraute, Simon, Robbe-Grillet, and Butor.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>To me it sounds more like a strain of U.S. metafiction from the sixties and seventies (although even then an unfair caricature), but I suppose that’s close enough for the intellectually perspicacious Wood.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>For what he is really relying on in this typically sloppy amalgam is not his readers’ knowledge (“as <i>we</i></span><span style="color:black;"> know…”) but their ignorance and their prejudices (<i>Nouveau roman</i></span><span style="color:black;">? Avant-garde? Just who do those snotty French think they are, anyway?).<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Most importantly:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Is this the sort of statement that inspires trust in a critic’s pronouncements on “experimental” and “unconventional” writing, or on writers who “exult in the unreadable, the indecipherable”?</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Wood goes on to situate Hamsun as an innovator in character and narration, but he defines that innovation in deeply conservative and traditional terms.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Hamsun, he writes, is <span style="color:black;">“virtually the inventor of a certain kind of modern fictionality,” and also “the great refiner of the stream of consciousness, that mode of writing that is in some ways the culmination of novelistic realism, of the novel’s traditional devotion to human beings, that represents the soul’s stutter.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>His heroes are souls, not fictive figments.”<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span><i>The novel’s traditional devotion to human beings</i></span><span style="color:black;"> – that reeks of ideology and polemic, especially when followed by the pious insistence that human beings are “souls.”<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>And so we have traveled in a kind of loop:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Wray’s novel <i>Lowboy</i></span><span style="color:black;"> needs to be less “unchallengingly realist” and more “experimental,” like the novels of Hamsun; Hamsun’s novels are radical and experimental because they extend traditional realism and affirm the human "soul."<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span></span>This is typical Wood: When “experimentalism” is acknowledged at all, it is immediately assimilated back into the traditional, doused in treacle about "the soul's stutter."<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Wood’s main device is thus the obverse of the Russian Formalists’ defamiliarization – it is <i>refamiliarization</i><span style="font-style:normal">.**</span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">The existence of the Wray review in the context of the other works available for reviewing – Littell’s <i>The Kindly Ones </i><span style="font-style:normal">and Beckett’s letters – functions as a test case for Wood’s professed desire for more “experimental” and less “conventional” fare.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Instead of issuing such protestations in a weak-tea review of a weak-tea book, Wood could simply have chosen to review one of these other, and certainly more challenging, volumes (to say nothing of the stream of interesting, vital fiction being issued by publishers such as <a href="http://www.dalkeyarchive.com/">Dalkey Archive Press</a>).<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>The objection that Wood was laboring under editorial constraints is weak; certainly he did not trade up from the </span><i>New Republic</i><span style="font-style:normal"> in order to be told what to review, and – unless he is on his way out again – he could certainly have expressed a preference with every expectation of its being accommodated.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>But instead we have the </span><i>New Yorker</i><span style="font-style:normal"> contemptuously dismissing </span><i>The Kindly Ones</i><span style="font-style:normal"> in an unsigned "Briefly Noted" capsule <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/arts/reviews/brieflynoted/2009/03/23/090323crbn_brieflynoted1">review</a> and the Beckett correspondence <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/atlarge/2009/03/30/090330crat_atlarge_lane">covered</a>, dully and dutifully, by movie-reviewer Anthony Lane ("compelling," he calls it).<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>Of course there will be other Wood reviews in the coming weeks and months, and no doubt some of them will be on important or challenging or even “experimental” books.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes"> </span>And then we will see to what extent his way of reading them departs from “the consensus view of reality.”</span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">__________________</p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">*</span><span style="mso-spacerun: yes"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> </span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">This is a rather different thing than the question of whether or not the reviewer subjectively “enjoyed” Bernhard’s </span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">Concrete</span></i><span style="font-style:normal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> or Pynchon’s </span></span><i><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">The Crying of Lot 49</span></i><span style="font-style:normal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> or whatever.</span><span style="mso-spacerun: yes"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> </span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">What counts are the aesthetic and critical protocols that are brought to bear in the essay or review, even in criticism that is as close at times to the merely affective as James Wood’s.</span><span style="mso-spacerun: yes"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> </span></span><o:p></o:p></span></p><p class="MsoNormal"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">** I'm not denying, I want to underscore, Hamsun's status as an innovator. The point is that Wood invariably casts such innovations in tendentiously backwards-looking terms. An early </span><a href="http://contrajameswood.blogspot.com/2008/10/keepin-it-real-james-wood-way.html"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">post</span></a><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;"> of mine shows how he does this, for example, with a passage from Joyce's </span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: italic;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">A Portrait of the Artist</span></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:small;">.</span></p> <!--EndFragment-->Edmond Caldwellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02651618912907453630noreply@blogger.com0