An
invenctive against mere fiction
“Writers
work out in words their intuitions—their private certainties—of how things are.
Good writers have right and significant intuitions, and they present their
intuitions intact by means of masterful technique.”
“Great
writers deal with problems which confront a healthy, intelligent man, however
grotesque the fictional representative; small writers deal with social or
physiological traps.”
Witchcraft
in Bullet Park —a book written by John Cheever,
which deals with the failure of the American dream.
“The
novel is bleak, full of danger and ofense, like a poisoned apple in the
playpen. Good an evil are real, but are effects of mindless chance—or heartless
grace.
The
way we write now
“American
novelists, even Americans by choice like Vladimir Nabokov or Jerzy Kosinski, can
never get rid of the qualifying effect of American literary and cultural
tradition—that is, the American character—as long as they write to or about
Americans.”
A
writer’s view of contemporary American fiction
“Everything
we write is an experiment. Only if the experiment fails do we call the work
experimental. We do not call Proust’s enormous novel experimental, or Joyce’s
Ulysses, or Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey, though all these were brand-new forms in
their days.
Almost
to a man, those who claim they write ‘innovative’, ‘experimental’ or
‘post-modern’ fiction are desperately attempting to emulate the Old
Europeans—who as far as I can make out, are doing everything in their power to
imitate the silly Europeans.”
What
writers do
“Any
writer who’s worked in various forms can tell you from experience that it all
feels like writing. Some people may feel that they’re ‘really’ writing when
they work on their novels and just fooling around when they write bedtime
stories for their children; but that can mean only one of two things, I think:
either that the writer has a talent for writing novels and not so much talent
for writing children’s stories, or else that the writer is a self-important
donzel who writes both miserable novels and miserable children’s stories.”
“The
odds against a writer’s achieving a real work of art are astronomical. Most
obviously the ‘they’ of our ‘They write fiction’ formula—in other words, the
writer’s personality—may go wrong. Every good writer is many things—a
symbolist, a careful student of character, a person of strong opinions, a lover
of pure tale or adventure.
In
a bad or just ordinary novel, the writer’s various selves war with one another.
We feel, as we read, not one commanding voice but a series of jarringly
different voices, even voices in sharp and confusing disagreement.”
If you feel like reading more, check
out No ignoramus (innocent of education) has ever produced great art.
*****
Goodreads Book Giveaway
Deconstructing INFATUATION
by Merce Cardus
Giveaway ends April 23, 2013.
See the giveaway details at Goodreads.
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an inspirational novel about the courage to be oneself freely.
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a thought-provoking novel about infatuation.
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