To be fair, I didn't even finish Kafka on the Shore. I love Murakami, but this was so boring and uninteresting and meandering that I just had to give up, less than a hundred pages from the end, which I never do, because the tedium of it made me want to die. I seriously cannot believe this won the World Fantasy Award. Also, authors should deeply reconsider whether annoying 15 year olds (who talk like 30 year olds) and their bizarre sexual habits are fascinating enough on their face to justify hundreds of pages of examination. It sounds trite to say nothing happened in this whole book, but it's a buddy flick where the buddies don't meet and their endgame is some murky WWII event (it is Murakami after all) of which only one (who is mentally disabled) is aware and then all of the sudden there are crystals and bizarrely helpful truck drivers and some kid is having sex with his mother and thinks it's awesome. But it's all so banal and flatly written that I don't even care--even less than I care about some of these other books, and that's saying a lot, so let's just leave it with a "not living up to his potential" comment on Murakami's report card. Guh.
Feed, on the other hand, was really and truly decent--though it thrives on the reader being young and thus never having read Stand on Zanzibar or any of the other SF novels that feature a constant stream of advertisement as a literary technique. Again, though, I have a problem with the bored, passive protagonist and his sexual fantasies being more or less all I'm given to hang on to as a persona. And the dying wrong side of the tracks girlfriend having actual serious thoughts about anything while the privileged boy goes on to...not have any. It's just kind of a tired trope. And the lesions were never explained, no matter how awesome the truffle line is. In general, I think that The Great Gatsby is great despite its excerable protagonists, not because of them, and I don't actually want to spend any time with mini-Nick or mini-Daisy, even on the moon. But back to this one in a second. Those would be the outliers, the best and worst of the lot.
I found none of the others to be bad books per se. Obviously, they're bestsellers of varying degrees and somebody loves them, they speak to someone. But I feel like, with every one, they were doing it wrong. Clearly doing it right for someone, but doing it wrong for me, personally, as a reader. And with every one I felt like I got a clearer idea of the actual difference between "literary fiction" and "genre."
The difference, I think, is rules.
I've commented before on litfic's obsession with suburbia, which Alice Sebold hilariously claims in the interview in the back pages of The Lovely Bones is somehow a neglected corner of Americana where all the real stories are and she had to learn as a writer to recognize it as a legitimate source of stories. To which, with all the class I can muster, I wave my brandy snifter and say: LOLWHUT. Look, I get that urban stories are legion--as long as that urban means New York and the protagonists are privileged white people, but suburbia is where it's at for literary fiction. The story of the repressed housewife being dissatisfied while her husband works miserably and her kids act out is getting to be nigh-on universal, no matter whether it's the 50s or the 00s. Hell, it's the plot of Mad Men, Desperate Housewives, Little Children, American Beauty...I could go on, but it's pointless. The siren call of the easy symoblism of an outwardly perfect row of houses and inwardly borked lives is resisted by precisely no one. The Lovely Bones is merely another entry in that restrictive genre of storytelling, and other than its otherworldly protagonist, alters the traditional narrative not even a little. But besides having to sit through yet another reel of how much being a wealthy white family in the suburbs sucks, what I really notices was a total lack of worldbuilding or rules of the game. And more, a total lack of interest in the same.
To be honest, Sebold seems to have no real interest in the afterlife she sets up at all. It's just a vantage point for the family drama, and half-baked serial killer thing (worst serial killer ever, by the way. There is no WAY this guy doesn't get caught in five seconds in the real world). And yet, what few rules she sets up (the dead can't affect anything, mainly) she breaks without any stated reason or justification. Those of you who have read the book will probably know the big Rule Breaking Moment I mean, when not only does our little Susie body-swap for no reason, without intent to do so or any possible sense of why she could, but she takes her last living moment not to talk to her tortured family about who killed her, but to bang a dude she liked in middle school, despite her only other sexual experience being brutal rape. Yay! Love is awesome!
But I just kept saying: why? Why can this happen? And what happened to the other girl's soul?
But Sebold isn't after that fish. She cares about a. the broken suburban family story and b. writing a scene she wanted to write without caring whether it fits with the universe of the book. Because she's not a genre writer, despite the genre window dressing, she doesn't recognize that the book has a universe, or care about rules, or worldbuilding--because it's ostensibly our world and doesn't have to be built. But for me as a reader this is just insane, because it's ghost time in the house, and the book just throws up its hands and says: weird things happen! We don't have to DWELL ON IT! Let's get back to a suburban dad smashing things.
Two final and beside the point points: one, the death of the serial killer was bullshit and I call shenanigans. There is an implication that Susie made it happen but it's fairly clear she didn't, at least to me, since it's all from her POV and she doesn't say she did it. But the refusal to decide whether the dead can or cannot affect things reaches its most ridiculous toward the end. This is not satisfying, for crying out loud. And by the way, a heaven where no matter what happens you cannot grow or heal or change, where you cannot grow up, ever, where you can meet other people but cannot be an adult, or sexual, or progress beyond the age and mentality of your death is not heaven. That's hell.
Ahem.
Same thing with A Brief History of the Dead. I got the gist of everything in literally the first 30 pages, which are easily the most interesting. I walked out and asked
And he wouldn't meet my eye.
What I wanted, with these afterlife porn books--the genre element of choice in American fiction--was some exploration of the world put forward, of what it means to be dead, of why people keep their general economic status, still working in restaurants, etc. Why do dead people need to eat? Does anyone, ever, do anything but stare into the distance and act depressed? But the authors didn't want to write those books. They wanted to write about Antarctica or the standard "the connections that bind us all" or, you know, "emotions."
As a genre writer, it's funny how I put emotions in quotes. We don't like emotions or characters, right? It's all about the world. And the worst genre fiction does get mired in that, the fetishizing of rules and worldbuilding. But, you know, some attention to the fact that you've invented this fascinating premise and are going literally nowhere with it and exploring nothing in it would be nice. And I use quotes because the emotional arcs presented by these books are just not intense or interesting enough to justify flying in the face of logic so often. I can't listen to parents mourning their kid because she hasn't died yet because they're EATING in a DINER and people are WORKING SHIFTS there and they're all dead and WHY? But it's the emotional content of the scene the author cares about, not making it work in an invented world. (Don't even get me started about the fuzzy fade to white handwaving ending of that book, either.) Really? Parents miss their kids? Stop the presses. We have got to get someone on this.
A Trip to the Stars...probably the best written of any of them, but the best example of why genre fiction can't have nice things. Every five pages the author picks up a genre trope, shakes it in confusion, and then throws it away. There's vampires, but they're gone within a few pages and no one cares. The whole thing is an embarrassing Mary Sue (Gary Stu, really) adopted kid's fantasy about how the protag's REAL family is RICH and AWESOME and will take him away to a palace in the desert where he'll get a perfect education from genius tutors and speak Greek and Latin and be awesome at drawing and get all the toys he wants and ALSO be awesome at sports and anyone who doesn't like him is inherently evil and despite all this he has tons of free time to wander in the desert where a spider will give him superpowers (that won't matter and will be forgotten) and his tutor will give him a BABY WOLF and also they're all TRUE DESCENDANTS OF ATLANTIS WTF. (Actually, the Atlantis thing is especially awesome, because supposedly it's their sooper special "double O positive" blood type that makes them Atlanteans. I thought that sounded weird, so I looked it up. Turns out that "double O" just means O, as it's a recessive gene. That means, fare from being the "rarest blood type on earth" it is in fact the single most common blood type on earth and it just so happens to be mine. So now, when
The point is that Nicholas Christopher doesn't give a shit about making all this magical stuff jive with the plot, nor, clearly, does he even recognize the painful Gary Stuness of his story. He cares about the relationship between his two main characters (sort of) and the rest exists so that the back cover copy girl can list a bunch of cool things separated by commas that make the book sound epic. Don't you want to read about vampires in the Old West, alien spiders, Captain Cook, Basque separatists, astronauts, Atlantis, and BABY WOLVES? I know I do! But none of those things matter to the book at all, and the minute one starts to matter, the author crushes them brutally and glares around daring you to remember that there were real fucking vampires like five pages ago and everything that's happening are coincidences that beggar the end of Jane Eyre. It's the real world, right? Shit just happens, and you don't have to explain it.
The Secret History is really a bit of a cheat on this list, because the doin it rong is completely different--though related. Once again I question why I want to hang out with the cast that got rejected from The Great Gatsby for being too assholish. These guys, all of them, are literally the worst people ever. And there's no reason that the worst one, Bunny, who gets killed on the first page, should have been let into the sooper special circle of classics students that the protagonist has to shit angel feathers to get into, where you have to be charming and smart and attractive and be approved by the perfect amazing teacher, given that Bunny is a colossal shit. Who can't do Latin or Greek. What the hell.
But my main issue is that only one thing of any interest occurs in this entire book. It happens to be the only genre element--the kids do a ritual to summon Dionysus and homes shows up. That is awesome, my friends. It's tossed off in three pages of dialogue. I suspect if you asked Tartt, she'd say it's a nod to Greek plays where all the action happens offscreen and is reported by a messenger. Yeah, whatever. It's the only interesting part of the book and it's what the book should have been about. We should have seen all those aborted attempts, and the group growing close and then fracturing over failures, not just be told about it by a bored 21 year old who talks like he's 90. Good grief.
But then, that would have been a genre book, right? If you center stage the weird shit, rather than using it as a fetching window treatment, then it's not Serious Literature. But what we're left with is a bunch of Literature that makes no sense because the authors are essentially operating a forklift they're not rated to handle. It's awesome! It goes up and down! It crushes things! Wheee! But if you don't read the manual, you end up with a messy factory, and everything is out of order and nothing makes sense. A novel should have its own internal system, its own logic, that coheres, that connects with itself. It should not be full of random incidents of magic that connect with nothing just because watching people grieve for three hundred pages is much harder to make interesting without ghosts or vampires. It feels lazy to me, intellectually lazy, to throw out scenes and leave them hanging, breaking all the rules of the world, with no explanation. And yet I see it again and again in these books.
I'm reminded of a speech from Six Feet Under, a show that for awhile managed to pull all off this afterlife/family drama stuff pretty well:
It may seem weird to you but there is a reason behing everything that we do here...
geeky
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2009-12-01 07:31 pm (UTC)
Not to say some genre doesn't do that, but I don't think litfic is a triumph of style these days.
2009-12-01 07:24 pm (UTC)
Disappointed to hear the Murakami was bad, as I'd planned to one day get to all the World Fantasy winners. You know, when I have buckets of spare time and am Old. (What Murakami do you love, then?)
Is there anyone in literary fiction that you think gets around to 'doing it right'? And what do you think of the whole slipstream vs interstitial labels in this company, or are those really only being used within the genre communities?
I guess I'm asking if you think litfic in general is worth bothering with, apart from it's connection to a certain popular sense of 'culture.' My sense from your post is that it's all a certain kind of nostalgia for a subculture my generation was never really part of.
2009-12-01 07:35 pm (UTC)
I love Wind Up Bird Chronicle. Wild Sheep Chase is also good, but Wind Up is amazing.
I do think slipstream and interstitial, despite efforts, is only being used in the genre community, in part because of the inferiority complex we all have about being accepted as literary writers.
I could list litfic that I like--The Last Samurai, Possession, etc, but to be honest, it's hard for me to come up with books that have NO unreal element to them. The Satanic Verses, Landscape Painted with Tea--the best has some of each, some realism, some fantastica. So I guess I'm asking if I'm allowed to include books that are considered literature but are really genre.
2009-12-01 07:25 pm (UTC)
I've been told the first 1/3 of Secret History is okay, and not to bother with the rest of it.
The whole "never age in heaven" is something that always bothered me. What about children who die before they learn language skills? What about the mentally damaged? Or the opposite, what if your family have changed beyond recognition by the time you get there? Are you stuck at a best-case version of yourself, with accidents/deterioration undone, or can you learn once there and keep changing?
Afterlife porn seems to be a growing genre. Forbidden Planet in london had to get rid of their much-loved book section "Macho Dudes With Guns" (it had a stencilled sign saying precisely that and everything) to make room for more shelves of "paranormal romance". It's taking over, there's more every time I go in there.
2009-12-01 07:38 pm (UTC)
I honestly think The Secret History is pretty much not good all the way through, for many, many reasons. It probably needed its own post.
At least in the Lovely Bones, she's a best case version of her 14 year old self, and she cannot grow up or ever change, and cannot develop mentally--ie sexually, it's a big plot point that she can't.
By the way the last line of the book is AWFUL. It's supposed to show she's accepted her life and become englightened and it SUCKS.
2009-12-01 07:26 pm (UTC)
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Sorry, cannot write any more. I have to go any polish my master's boots, ready for tomorrow's licking.
That was 'boots'.
2009-12-01 07:39 pm (UTC)
You put in words all the things I thought about Lovely Bones but didn't want to waste my energy to write them down. Thanks. I'll be sending people over to this entry whenever somebody asks me opinion about this book. :D
2009-12-03 07:18 am (UTC)
2009-12-01 07:44 pm (UTC)
Alien equals New Jersey
2009-12-01 07:45 pm (UTC)
Good for you, in other words.
And, typo or not, "symoblism" has joined my vocabulary.
Re: Alien equals New Jersey
2009-12-01 07:51 pm (UTC)
2009-12-01 07:48 pm (UTC)
My main problem with her heaven is that it's really just a psychotherapist's office dressed up in What Dreams May Come drag. Susie has to work through her "issues" and "problems" there. She even has a counselor. Psychotherapy Heaven.
I had fewer issues with A Brief History of the Dead, although I did figure it out way early, too, the idea behind it. I was interested, though, to read through the Antarctic sections, and what I didn't know would happen or not until the end was whether or not the protagonist would survive or somehow pull off a save myself, save purgatory miraculous act. So my reading of that book wasn't predicated on figuring out the purgatory life=someone alive remembers you idea. It was whether or not the main character would survive and save, or die and all the lights go out.
Haven't read A Trip to the Stars.
Couldn't get very far into the Murakami, despite love a lot of his other stuff. I was a fan of Sputnik Sweetheart. You might want to try that one instead. It's from an earlier, leaner period in his writing, and reads a bit like a Jonathan Carrol novel.
We're working on the interstitial thing. I've had emails from professors who have taught the first volume and are eager about the second, so it's slowly leaking into the academy. And some literary writers have nudged me about it as well, to find out more. So...it may have a life there at some point. Maybe. Time will tell.
2009-12-01 07:54 pm (UTC)
I guess I was disappointed that the lights did go out at the end. It seemed like the most boring choice. I didn't get a feeling of tragedy, just shoddy worldbuilding and some Antarctic Shackleton adventures.
I might try Sputnik--I adore Wind Up Bird Chronicle and A Wild Sheep Chase.
2009-12-01 07:49 pm (UTC)
2009-12-01 07:54 pm (UTC)
I love it in the same way I loved all of the scenery in that old videogame, King's Quest IV--the things that are not part of the adventure quest, but that flesh out the universe.
I see your point about Brief History--and I probably have an inordinate fondness for it because when I first read the first chapter from it--published in The New Yorker in the week of Johnny Cash's death--I was struck by how it described to the T my childhood beliefs about mortality and afterlife.
As for The Secret History, I gave it to an ex to read while we were both teenagers, and I think it turned him into a sociopath.
2009-12-01 07:59 pm (UTC)
I guess my problem is the actual story going on in A Trip to the Stars just isn't very interesting to me, and the 60s and 70s are so over-chronicled in American literature that I have a hard time relating to it. And when everything interesting is brought up and then promptly ignored, I just don't have anything to hold onto in the book. If it were ignored in favor of something more absorbing, maybe, but it just feels lazy to me, especially since it doesn't purport to be anything but the real world, some explanation of anything is really necessary. But it's really the combination of that with an amazing number of incredibly convenient coincidences that gets me. In order for it to be a tapestry, for me, there has to be more than 20 people in the world that things can happen to, and the book felt very claustrophobic in its obsession with one group of Very Special People.
YMMV, obviously. It sells better than my books.
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But I think these books are "full of random incidents of magic that connect with nothing" not just to spice up the emotion, but because to the authors, the ghosts and the vampires and all the rest of it aren't metaphysical; they're just metaphorical. And so they don't have to fit into a larger coherent system with consequences; they serve a brief purpose to cast a certain light on the actual subject matter of the book, and then they're done. I could be wrong -- I haven't read the specific books you're talking about -- but I've had some interesting conversations with a screenwriter who keeps being given fantasy projects to adapt, and his insistence on figuring out what the magical stuff symbolizes makes me really think he's missing the point of fantasy. Not that we can't have symbolism; of course we can. But making it symbolism first and metaphysical reality second feels like the literary approach to me, not the fantastical one.
2009-12-01 08:22 pm (UTC)
In Trip to the Stars they don't symbolize anything, so far as I can tell. I'm not even sure if it could be safely said to in the Lovely Bones, because it comes from the American mindset that a perfect and personal disneyland heaven isn't fantasy but fact.
2009-12-01 08:31 pm (UTC)
Sorry for edit -- grabby Changeling posted preemptively!
Edited at 2009-12-01 08:33 pm (UTC)
2009-12-01 08:36 pm (UTC)
http://yuki-onna.livejournal.com/66
That is a REALLY old post there, but. you should read it.
Also Wind Up Bird Chronicle is pretty great.
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2009-12-01 08:41 pm (UTC)
That said, your distaste for mainstream literary fiction is not hard to understand. Most of those books aren't written for readers; they're written for editors, critics and judges' panels. I've learned that the really good books, the ones worth keeping, have no particular provenance or label. I think Lem's "Star Diaries" has far more to say about life than any around-the-yard-and-in-the-kitchen book, but most people look at it and see rocket ships, and immediately stop thinking about what they're seeing. They have a convenient hole to drop it into that has been hollowed out for them years in advance.
I recommend "Zanzibar" to most everyone I meet who has writerly ambitions. I cannot say the same for "The Secret History".
I will, however, defend "The Accidental Tourist" as being one of the exceptions - a mainstream book that I connected with a great deal and still re-read to this day. Part of it is, I think, the humor (which is genuine and warm, not snide cocktail-party cheap shots at the Little People) and the "yeah, I used to live next door to someone like that!" characterization.
A curious note about "Bones". A while back I was working on a book of my own that was an experimental, fictionalized exploration of a real-life incident where a girl was abducted and killed by four boys who had little in the way of remorse or even comprehension for their acts. When "Bones" came out I shelved it, and the more I heard about "Bones" the more deeply it was shelved -- not because I felt like what I'd created was a copy of Sebold's book, but because I realized I'd been making one of her same key mistakes: exploring the least interesting aspects of a situation.
Then again, maybe not. My book was written from the girl's POV after her death, but with certain constraints: she can only tell you what other people have known or experienced, not what she herself was thinking or feeling. The idea was that since all that is left of us after death (assuming you don't believe in an afterlife) is what other people remember, and so a book from the POV of that aggregate of memory seemed like it would be interesting.
I am torn between leaving it shelved and completing it just to see if I can make such an experimental POV stick. And because -- it must be said -- that I felt completing it would be that much more of a way of returning to memory someone who was consigned to memory all too soon.
I hope some of that made sense. This text box is tiny.
2009-12-01 09:00 pm (UTC)
I just lent my mother a copy of We Were the Mulvaneys, which was a better story about a family dealing w/similar issues w/o the speculative elements. Then again, Oates is a writer I trust.
Haven't read any of the other books, though I've been meaning to read The Secret History for years now. This year I did read The Time Traveler's Wife and liked it, despite some issues with Niffenegger's writing. I felt like she was genuinely invested in the speculative premise w/o it being merely, as you say, window dressing.
2009-12-01 09:08 pm (UTC)
EXACTLY.
I operate heavy machinery for a living, so I know the feeling of Whee! Awesome! every day. But I'm also a professional and trained and do my ongoing training to stay at the top of my abilities. And I see the consequences of failure to do that, in very dramatic ways.
What I'm saying is that some litfic is the equivalent of a rolled tractor-trailer in the median of the highway. It's pretentious and boring. It doesn't hold together on a world-building level. Which is probably why I've avoided most of it since I got that English degree 18 years ago.
I read and write genre. Because if you're introducing vampires on page 2, there had better be bloodsucking on page 20 and stakings on page 37. Bringing them up and then dropping them feels sloppy, it feels distractable. "A loaded gun brought onstage in the first act must go off by the third act." But litfic leaves the gun lying about and it never does go off. Unless of course, it changes into a candlabra around act 4.
Edited at 2009-12-01 09:09 pm (UTC)
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