Spleen
I started writing notes towards my end-of-month
entry about books I'll have read, but realised that this one stirred me to such
spleen that it needed an entry all to itself. This is not a review, so I'm not
going to even name the novel: my aim is to get the thing out of my system rather
than to protect you from it (though I'm leaving in enough clues for you to
figure it out). And since it has received high praise in some quarters, you may
well enjoy it. But here goes
anyhow.It's probably a commonplace
among Cultural Studies
cognoscenti
that different texts are meant to be read in different ways: the kind of
attention you bring to a novel by Jane Austen is different from the way you take
in information from an advertisement on the back of a bus in traffic. If you
bring to either of them the kind of attention that is appropriate for the other,
you're likely to get cranky one way or another.The advertisement will seem to
insult your intelligence; Jane will seem to go on about not very much. I met
this idea in Meaghan Morris's excellent and challenging
Too Soon Too
Late, probably the only book of
cultural studies I've ever read, and it came in handy when I was trying to
understand the success of the book I've just finished reading. Read with
anything like close attention, the book is atrocious. Hardly a page goes by
without the kind of error that an attentive copy editor would surely have picked
up, let alone an author who cared about detail polishing a draft. My favourite
example isn't printable here because I aspire to a PG rating. Suffice to say
there's cleft in a most unusual place, and the word "soul" is used twice in a
sentence along with three anatomical words that are definitely not PG. But take
these little
gems:The Doll followed a small monsoon of Asian tourists pouring into the hotel's lobby, the eye of their storm a woman with a long stick topped with a plastic sunflower. If
you don't object to a pouring monsoon with an eye, presumably borrowed from a
cyclone, then how about
this:Wilder said nothing. Wilder knew nothing drove him madder than saying nothing. She changed the topic, knowing that made him angrier still. Of
course anyone can make mistakes like this. But they're not supposed to get into
print, at least not in books that are touted as being by internationally
prestigious novelists, and certainly not with the frequency they occur here. And
I'm not counting the occasional genteelly aspiring "and she" where "and her"
would be correct. Then there are things that don't lend themselves easily to
quotation. The main character is set up with a verbal habit of calling people
"my friend", a habit which disappears altogether until it is suddenly brought
back into play about 200 pages later. There's a chapter early on where a male
character broods on the parlous state of his marriage (if you can get past the
narrator's clumsiness enough to register this sort of thing as brooding: "The
sex was absurd, pointless; an affirmation only of what they didn't have -- the
affection, tenderness, hope and dreams that had once been theirs") and on how
deeply he loves his sons -- but the sons don't even get names, and although the
chapter starts with him standing in the doorway of his youngest son's bedroom,
we discover four pages later that there are only two of them. It's for all the
world as if the writer didn't know at the start of the chapter how many sons
there were, made up his mind after four pages, and didn't care enough to go back
and make that "youngest" a "younger". I don't think this is just me being a
pedant: it's as if no-one bothered to make the world or characters of the book
convincing, as if the actual
imagining
of the story is left to the reader.It
occurred to me that I'd read this kind of writing before. This book has been
compared to Peter Corris's Cliff Hardy books -- unfavourably
by Germaine Greer, bless her old-fashioned literary sensibility, favourably by
others. Wrong comparison! This book strives to
emulate, not the taut, hard-boiled prose and pose of Corris (though the
statement on the first page that "the innocent heart of Jesus could never have
enough of human love" is probably best read as a gesture towards a tough-guy
voice), but that paradigm of successful writing of our time,
The Da V i n c i Code
(spacing to avoid giving it even more
Google-juice). The narrator here throws words at his idea in the same way Dan
Brown does there, evidently hoping that enough of them will stick to get the
general effect he's after. Back to the idea I picked up from Meaghan Morris: the
book isn't meant to be read carefully with attention to the words. There's no
room here for the pleasures of the text. It's meant to be skimmed: the reader
isn't meant to care about the words on the page, but to take in enough of them
to allow a satisfactory story to be extracted. So syntax doesn't matter, nor do
precise meanings. A first draft will do. I'm not saying that the book is written
without research or passion, or even without ambition to move its readers, just
that attention to detail isn't considered necessary: there are enough rude words
for spice and an accurate enough presentation of a corrupt society, especially a
corrupt press, to satisfy the like-minded. There's a scene in which the
provisions of Australia's recent anti-terrorism laws are spelled out
laboriously. As one of my sons said, "It's badly written, but it's got some good
ideas."None of this would matter so
much. I mean, when you find awful writing in a novel by Lynda La Plante, or Steve
Bochco, you probably shrug like me and go on enjoying their television
offerings. But the publicity machine accompanying this book wants it both ways.
On the one hand, there's a note on the back cover telling me where I can
download "reading group notes", and the prelim pages inform me the author is
regarded "internationally as one of Australia's pre-eminent novelists". On the
other hand there's a web site featuring a "trailer" with close-ups of large bare breasts
and fluorescent knickers bumping and grinding away, and a high-adrenaline slogan
that actually doesn't reflect the content of the book at all -- this is a
trailer for the book, mind you. No doubt there will be a movie. Maybe it will be
good. Meanwhile the passionate heart of the book is ostensibly a denunciation
of lazy, venal or corrupt public discourse in which people's reputations and
even lives are shredded in the service of the greedy, the ambitious or the
politically expedient, while the majority of people acquiesce out of laziness,
gullibility or unreflective cynicism. The book, in its Dan-Brownishness and its
marketing hooha, is part of the thing it pretends to
denounce.It's published by the company
who publish Tim Winton. I imagine that makes them serious publishers. (And
either Tim Winton is a bloody good reviser of his own drafts or they treat his
work with less haste and more respect than this hapless profit crying like a
wilderness.) No wonder there are people who say they don't like Australian
fiction. I did read to the last page (a gracious though possibly defensive note
on sources), and now I need to reclaim my mind. If I didn't have work to do I'd
get out the video of the excellent German film it
claims to have stolen its plot from.
Posted: Sun - February 4, 2007 at 02:21 PM
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This started out as a patchy journal about family life with my mother-in-law, Mollie, who has Alzheimers and was then living with us. Mollie has moved, first into a "low-care facility" then, in July 2004, into a nursing home. As these and other events have overtaken us, the blog has moved on ...
A note on comments: You can read comments on the same page as the entry rather than in a pop-up window, by clicking on the category button ("Mollie" etc) at the end of the entry and then on the "Read more" button.
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Published On: Jan 22, 2009 06:25 AM
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