Novelists No One Reads Anymore

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I’m reading the Midnight Folk to my kid now. It’s part of NYRB Children’s Classics series

The Beatles were the first to popularize wokeism (President Keyes), Tuesday, 13 December 2022 13:22 (one year ago) link

There was a movie of Even Cowgirls Get the Blues, but it was Gus Van Sant with Uma Thurman. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Even_Cowgirls_Get_the_Blues_(film)

I may have tried to watch it - I honestly don't remember. With some exceptions, I generally don't enjoy movies based on books I like. Because films mostly don't film what I like about books (which is mostly sentences, by which I mean narrative prose).

This isn't (I hope) a stereotypical "OMG THEY CHANGED IT" objection. Just that movies tend have characters and dialog and stuff happening, so when a filmmaker goes to adapt a book, they gravitate toward the filmable elements. Like, characters saying and doing stuff. Stuff happening. Which can be fine, and an artwork in its own right. When I like a book, I sometimes like the movie of it - but usually for different reasons than I liked the book.

Usually when I like a book I like the sentences in it (the stuff that is not as filmable) rather than the stuff that happens in it (the stuff that is more filmable). Anthony Minghella made a decently successful movie called "The English Patient," for example. I saw it and thought it was okay. But literally nothing that I liked about Michael Ondaatje's novel The English Patient - one of my very favorite novels - appeared in the movie.

Robbins at his peak had a decently rich and ecstatic gonzo prose style. It does not translate to film. You can make a movie of the plot, sure, go ahead. But for me the action is in the prose.

Cirque de Soleil Moon Frye (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 13 December 2022 15:39 (one year ago) link

I’m reading the Midnight Folk to my kid now. It’s part of NYRB Children’s Classics series

― The Beatles were the first to popularize wokeism (President Keyes), Tuesday, 13 December 2022 13:22 bookmarkflaglink

how correct was my iirc post, PK? I read it when I was staying at an airbnb near Denbigh while walking Offa's Dyke, in a bedroom full of children's books, with a view out across the Welsh landscape. In other words I remember the context quite vividly, but not the book itself.

Fizzles, Tuesday, 13 December 2022 18:22 (one year ago) link

Very Fizzles.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 13 December 2022 18:31 (one year ago) link

xxxpost Sounds good, YMP, thanks. Will give him another chance if I come across any more books.
Somewhere I acquired the mental image of Shelly Duvall in all-white rodeo/parade float gear, slso sporting giant thumbs, apparently congenital, perfect for hitchhiking---wiki:

...it was reported that she was to star as the lead in the film adaptation of Tom Robbins’s Even Cowgirls Get the Blues, which was to star Mick Jagger, Jerry Hall, Cindy Hall and Sissy Spacek'
she said that (starting in 1980 she "worked on it for four years, but I lost the rights to Darryl Hannah."

Are Tom McGuane's novels good? The New Yorker recently published a short story that I thought could work better as a streaming etc. adaptation.

dow, Tuesday, 13 December 2022 18:31 (one year ago) link

well, so far Kay is sneaking out at night with the toys his governess hid away from him and encountering beings who are searching for hidden gold.

The Beatles were the first to popularize wokeism (President Keyes), Tuesday, 13 December 2022 18:39 (one year ago) link

So you're basically otm

The Beatles were the first to popularize wokeism (President Keyes), Tuesday, 13 December 2022 18:40 (one year ago) link

Borges likes any old anglo crap tbf.
brutal and fair
- J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Tuesday, 13 December 2022 12:34 bookmarkflaglink


I also like any old anglo crap, I should say. And I need to soften slightly, as his list contains a lot of wider ranging European and American literature. But he does have a love of an anglo form I'II hazily describe as 'romance, mystical-adjacent mystery, and the pastoral' all of which obviously blur into each other. The Three Impostors is an execrable book in many ways, Machen as the epigone of RLS, and TTI to The New Arabian Nights its poncif. but it does have something and that something is an ineluctable progress to the centre of a labyrinth of mystery - supernal or infernal - through pure randomness or standing entirely still. Absolutely no detection as such whatsoever. That is to say in London the mystery discovers you, in fact it must do, eventually, because it is an infinite city. None of this is exactly surprising with Borges, but like the other books in his list it does indicate one facet of his writing in a slightly different light.

Fizzles, Tuesday, 13 December 2022 18:57 (one year ago) link

Yeah, he took what he needed from pulp and so on---bringing me back to movies for a second: Sergio Leone talked about how this could work better than trying to adapt high-brow/more respectable/commercially and/or critically successful material, pointing out that Dr. Strangelove was built from Peter George's Red Alert, UK knock-off the US bestseller Fail-Safe, which was an extreme example of the Cold War "See, the System can work" subgenre.

dow, Tuesday, 13 December 2022 20:04 (one year ago) link

Bringing it back to Borges, I mentioned his poking through true crime etc. re: A Universal History of Infamy on Borges translation?

dow, Tuesday, 13 December 2022 20:09 (one year ago) link

An obvious point, but another excuse to plug that book.

dow, Tuesday, 13 December 2022 20:11 (one year ago) link

he took what he needed from pulp and so on
and wanted as a reader as well, judging by his comments in Professor Borges etc. Relatable.

dow, Tuesday, 13 December 2022 20:45 (one year ago) link

he took what he needed

I HAVE WRITTEN A BOOK, MYSELF, I AM A WRITER, I HAVE WRITTEN A BOOK AND IT’S CALLED— “‘HE GOT WHAT HE WANTED BUT HE LOST WHAT HE HAD’! THAT’S IT! SHUT UP! SHUT UP! SHUT UP!

Soda Stereo Total (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 13 December 2022 20:50 (one year ago) link

Borges also greatly admired Shaw, who wasn't a Romantic. (And Chesterton who might have a better claim to be in some degree mystical or mysterious.)

the pinefox, Tuesday, 13 December 2022 21:44 (one year ago) link

I also like any old anglo crap, I should say.

oh yeah I'm continually threatening to get back into Trollope don't get me wrong

J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Tuesday, 13 December 2022 22:14 (one year ago) link

i read half asleep in frog pajamas by tom robbins but i don't remember anything about it other than coming away with the idea that the dude was a real fucking goofball

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 13 December 2022 22:16 (one year ago) link

Anglo-Saxon Attitudes to thread!

Soda Stereo Total (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 13 December 2022 22:27 (one year ago) link

It's about time I read another long Trollope.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 13 December 2022 22:49 (one year ago) link

Are Tom McGuane's novels good?


Reading the McGuane section (centered around the book Panama and McGuane's Hollywood career madness) in Matthew Specktor's Always Crashing in The Same Car pretty much put me off of McGuane, but TBF I read a couple of Jim Harrison books and didn't feel the need to continue in that direction.

Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 14 December 2022 04:31 (one year ago) link

I've read three of McGuane's books and saw the film he directed of one of them, 92 in the Shade. I found The Bushwhacked Piano very funny in an absurdist way, but Something To Be Desired from 1984 was a lot more sentimental and conventional.
I haven't read his debut novel The Sporting Club, but the film adaptation is my pick for worst movie ever made.

Halfway there but for you, Wednesday, 14 December 2022 16:08 (one year ago) link

Kathy Lette

fetter, Thursday, 15 December 2022 23:42 (one year ago) link

John Gardner. Has anyone read him?

the pinefox, Saturday, 17 December 2022 11:58 (one year ago) link

imo the midnight folk >>> the box of delights

i loooooved the former as a kid and ripped off some of the names of kay's stuffed animals for my own (viz i had a stuffed donkey called robin pointnose). the idea that they have always been kay's guardians and soldiery is a nice idea, like he'd kind of grown out of this and they had become disheartened and sloppy then a peril fully arose and everyone teams up and tools up and rises to the occasion

as i recall i found the narrative confusing bcz there's a massive (treasure-related) flashback for the story that a very old bedridden lady tells abt a sequence of father-son-grandson ne'er'do'wells who all have the same name (abner brown), which in tone feels like a different book tbh (which fair enough in context but it threw me as a very skippy kid reader)

i particularly liked the section where he hides in a witch's cupboard -- it has a good LIST of magical items, inc. both seven-league boots and also 49-league boots (which are twitching and have to be nailed down they're so powerful)

mark s, Saturday, 17 December 2022 13:12 (one year ago) link

also in the house we always stayed in on our summer holidays someone had carefully written out by hand masefield's sea fever and put it up on the wall with presed wild flower and a v ancient b/w photo of some retired old sailor looking out to sea with a telescope (i believe named captain kettle):

I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,
And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by;
And the wheel’s kick and the wind’s song and the white sail’s shaking,
And a grey mist on the sea’s face, and a grey dawn breaking.

I must go down to the seas again, for the call of the running tide
Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied;
And all I ask is a windy day with the white clouds flying,
And the flung spray and the blown spume, and the sea-gulls crying.

I must go down to the seas again, to the vagrant gypsy life,
To the gull’s way and the whale’s way where the wind’s like a whetted knife;
And all I ask is a merry yarn from a laughing fellow-rover,
And quiet sleep and a sweet dream when the long trick’s over.

i also very much liked these lines as a child (not a novel tho). somewhere packed up among my books is his actual adult adventure novel ODTAA (stands for one damn thing after another, good title imo) but i haven't read it

mark s, Saturday, 17 December 2022 13:20 (one year ago) link

this is a scene from the flashback section (which is fairly treasure island-y i guess) as found in my puffin books edn; illustrator is rowland hilder

https://thecityoflostbooks.glasgow.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/hilder4-768x582.jpg

mark s, Saturday, 17 December 2022 14:07 (one year ago) link

John Gardner. Has anyone read him?

Think I tried once or twice, but mostly know him from hearsay and didn’t like what I heard. Always got the impression that he was a literary Calvinist scold who looked at other writers and his characters through the wrong end of his telescope and sorted them into a list of who’s saved and who’s damned, who’s hot and who’s not, with the chosen happy few being those who live up to his mandarin criteria of following the artist’s way while everyone else was consigned to the hinterlands. Believe literary hit man Gilbert Sorrentino - it was he!- described Gardner as being of the “puppeteer school of novelists.” I had an English teacher in high school who was kind of Jean Brodie-type influencer. One of his influences I had to reject was telling us that Nabokov and Poe and maybe a few more were lightweights because Gardner said so, although he seems to maybe have changed his tune on this over the years.

Soda Stereo Total (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 17 December 2022 14:12 (one year ago) link

Even when everybody I knew was reading Gardner's instructional books on writing (which are great!) nobody read the novels, and people commented on how weird it was that his writing advice was so spot-on when his books themselves were not so great.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Saturday, 17 December 2022 14:35 (one year ago) link

them wot can't do, etc etc

Guayaquil (eephus!), Saturday, 17 December 2022 14:35 (one year ago) link

^read the comments too!

Soda Stereo Total (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 17 December 2022 15:21 (one year ago) link

I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,
I left my pants and socks there, I wonder if they're dry?

ledge, Saturday, 17 December 2022 16:35 (one year ago) link

lol spike, he was exactly the age -- and temperament -- to get aggressively bored b yit, by the time i encountered it it was a fragile fragment of a lost world

mark s, Saturday, 17 December 2022 17:04 (one year ago) link

Good memories Mark S - sounds like I should try to read this Masefield book also.

the pinefox, Saturday, 17 December 2022 17:25 (one year ago) link

Very interesting comments on Gardner. In the PARIS REVIEW interview he seems full of himself and certainly sure that his opinions count for a lot.

the pinefox, Saturday, 17 December 2022 17:29 (one year ago) link

Now that we’ve established that, we’re left with the task of finding out whether any of his own novels are still read and are any good or not.

Soda Stereo Total (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 17 December 2022 17:55 (one year ago) link

Here is the first page of the action of October Light. I don’t know if I shall read further. /pvmic

[The Patriot’s Rage, and the Old Woman’s Finding of the Trashy Book by the Bedside

“Corruption? I’ll tell you about corruption, sonny!” The old man glared into the flames in the fireplace and trembled all over, biting so hard on the stem of his pipe that it crackled once, sharply, like the fireplace logs. You could tell by the way he held up the stem and looked at it, it would never be the same. The house was half dark. He never used lights, partly from poverty, partly from a deep-down miserliness. Like all his neighbors on Prospect Mountain—like all his neighbors from the Massachusetts line clear to Canada, come to that—he was, even at his most generous, frugal. There was little in this world he considered worth buying. That was one reason that in the darkness behind him the television gaped like a black place where once a front tooth had hung. He’d taken the twelve gauge shotgun to it, three weeks ago now, for its endless, simpering advertising and, worse yet, its monstrously obscene games of greed, the filth of hell made visible in the world: screaming women, ravenous for refrigerators, automobiles, mink coats, ostrich-feather hats; leering glittering-toothed monsters of ceremonies—for all their pretty smiles, they were vipers upon the earth, those panderers to lust, and their programs were blasphemy and high treason. He couldn’t say much better for the endless, simpering dramas they put on, now indecent, now violent, but in any case an outrage against sense. So he’d loaded the shotgun while the old woman, his sister, sat stupidly grinning into the

Soda Stereo Total (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 17 December 2022 17:59 (one year ago) link

I’ve not read him except the odd interview & essay (where yeah he comes across v pompous with his moral fiction steez) but Grendel is def still read inc maybe by me one day cause it looks good

Wiggum Dorma (wins), Saturday, 17 December 2022 18:00 (one year ago) link

Yeah, Grendel seems to be the one to read.

Soda Stereo Total (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 17 December 2022 18:04 (one year ago) link

I actually picked up a copy of October light but it’s quite fat so I’ll see how I get on with the slimmer ones before I decide whether to read. From that milieu of less-read-anymore Americans of then I’ve read about half a dozen by Robert coover & am maybe 60/40 like/don’t like and still would struggle to answer the question “good or not iyo”

Wiggum Dorma (wins), Saturday, 17 December 2022 18:11 (one year ago) link

Grendel is part of Gollancz’s Fantasy Masterwork series. I don’t imagine Gardner would’ve been too chuffed to be remembered now as primarily an author of fantasy. Apparently Gardner mentions Howard the Duck (the Steve Gerber comic) somewhere in On Moral Fiction, which Gerber took as a big validation from a high tone lit critic.

Ward Fowler, Saturday, 17 December 2022 19:40 (one year ago) link

I'm pretty sure I read Mickelsson's Ghosts back in the day. It obviously wasn't very memorable.

I used to use his book The Art of Fiction in the creative writing class I taught. My students were usually skeptical.

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Saturday, 17 December 2022 19:43 (one year ago) link

oh Grendel is great, i've read it

i got mixed up with the John Gardner who did James Bond books after Fleming died

partez Maroc anthem (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 17 December 2022 20:19 (one year ago) link

yes, very much like Grendel. have a copy of The Sunlight Dialogues I hope to get to at some point.

bulb after bulb, Saturday, 17 December 2022 20:26 (one year ago) link

Will have to check those two and his instructional books. In the late 70s, I went to a reading. He was already onstage as we filed in, with a motorcycle-booted ankle resting on worn denim knee, studying us (yes, boot, knee, and he were studying. He was wearing a long, loose white linen top with a design on the chest: a singlet, is that what you call it? He was short, even sitting down With long white-blondish hair, like singer-songwriter Paul Williams, also a short Rick Wakeman. but with round wire-framed Lennon glasses, so more like Williams.
I don't remember what he was talking about when a man stood up in the audience, stalked to the center aisle, identified himself as Richard Ivo Schneider, and rebuked Garnder for (as RIS put it) saying somewhere that medieval aristocrats read lives of the saints for entertainment. Gardner replied in a low-key, laidback way, then muttered something more as Schneider was returning to his seat. S. wheeled around and shouted, "You should go to Europe and visit the reliquaries of the saints!" (point being, I take it, that they wouldn't be still be available if somebody with money and position hadn't taken them seriously enough). Gardner: "Thank you, I've done that."
he then read his short story, "The Temptation of St. Ivo," which reminded me of "All Along The Watchtower," until the bad guys suddenly vanished, like a figment of a fancy paranoiac's imagination.

dow, Saturday, 17 December 2022 20:45 (one year ago) link

!

Soda Stereo Total (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 17 December 2022 20:59 (one year ago) link

He was visiting from York?

Soda Stereo Total (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 17 December 2022 22:10 (one year ago) link

Anyway, awesome story.

Soda Stereo Total (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 17 December 2022 23:17 (one year ago) link

I've read three of McGuane's books and saw the film he directed of one of them, 92 in the Shade. I found The Bushwhacked Piano very funny in an absurdist way, but Something To Be Desired from 1984 was a lot more sentimental and conventional.

I’ve only read The Bushwhacked Piano. For the first 2/3 it felt like it could be The Great American Comic Novel (I have no idea what is the Great American Comic Novel). There is one exchange in particular involving the name of a bat (the animal) that is one of the funniest pieces of writing I’ve read. Unfortunately, the last 1/3 has to make the big statement about How We Live Today in America, which mainly means unfunny gross-out humor, death, heartbreak, and general misery. The sexist streak that stays mostly hidden throughout also surfaces: both hero and heroine are likeable, exasperating flakes, but by the end he’s become a semi-tragic mythical figure, while she betrays him and reverts back to being a privileged trust fund baby. The prose is great throughout.

I also rather like The Missouri Breaks which he scripted, though it's deservers it bad reputation in many ways.

gjoon1, Saturday, 17 December 2022 23:41 (one year ago) link

Grendel seemed to be everywhere in the 90s: on high school syllabuses, in bookstores used and new. I had the impression that it was considered an important book, a modern classic, so it was surprising later on when I learned how low the critical reputation of John Gardner was, or at least had become since then.

I think it’s close to a masterpiece. I have not read it in probably 30+years, but there are lines, images that still rattle around inside my brain. If I hesitate to call it a flat-out masterpiece, it’s because it’s so grueling and bleak (despite plenty of comic bits) that I have never felt like going back to it. One of the all-time great closing sentences too.

gjoon1, Saturday, 17 December 2022 23:43 (one year ago) link


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