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For a dozen years,
my job was to read books. Actually, as an editor of serious nonfiction,
I didn't actually read books. I read manuscripts, either those I went
on to publish or, more frequently, ones I had to reject. Though I would
no doubt have been a better editor if I'd reconnoitered widely in the
fields I was working in, I didn't tend to read what other presses put
out.
The truth is that I was comfortable reading nonfiction only with a pencil
in hand. On the occasions when I bought bound books, I couldn't help
myself. Id look for ways to make the book better: a more thorough
introduction here, some prudent cutting there. In bookstores I looked
at the typeface, jacket design, and even the marketing copy of other
publishers books, and, with an overactive editorial eye, I critiqued
and, sometimes, cribbed.
Off duty, I read fiction. I have always had to carry a purse large enough
to hold at least one book. My night table is stacked with teetering
piles of novels. When I travel, my luggage feels like it's filled with
bricks.
Im not terribly picky about the fiction I read. Im as happy
with the newest Michael Connelly mystery as with the latest Man Booker
Prize winner. Ill follow a reread of Wallace Stegners Angle
of Repose with a chick-lit binge. Elizabeth George sits next to
George Eliot in my house.
Many of us get pleasure from fiction, and not just reading it, but thinking
about it. The growth of book clubs is testament to the nostalgic rewards
of English class. Layers of gratification are added when you feel like
you understand what the author is up to. You can allow yourself to be
transported during the reading, and then, in tranquility, recollect
the emotion and attempt to unlock the mysteries. But readers of literature,
even many literary scholars (certain critical techniques notwithstanding),
take for granted that the author's choices are, for the most part, a
given; that the text is what you have to work with.
Learning how to write fiction has wrested from me the pleasure of reading
it.
When I enrolled in an M.F.A. program in creative writing, I told my
friends that if they ever heard me use workshop as a verb,
they should just shoot me in the head. Now, a year later, I can report
that Ive workshopped and been workshopped nearly to death. The
workshop is the entree of writing programs. Literature classes are appetizers,
sometimes dessert, but the workshop is the big slab of meat on the neophyte
writers plate.
The best you can hope for, having delivered up your story or essay,
is that someone will say, I like it, but
. Sometimes
what follows the but is something like, I just feel
that this character experienced something really traumatic in her life,
before the story takes place, like maybe she killed her mother and slept
with her father. You look at the story, about a 10-year-old girl
learning to play softball, and think, Hmmm. Maybe the group
will want the author to get rid of a character, even the main character,
or change the tense or point of view: This story wants to be written
from the perspective of the dog. Once you've been in a workshop
long enough, you can begin to predict the comments of your peers. One
person will always want more extraneous details. Another will say, with
feeling, that he's just not feeling it. Someone else will find a way
to use the piece being workshopped to talk about herself and her own
experiences.
Dont get me wrong. A good workshop will generate lots and lots
of suggestions, some of which may be extremely helpful to the author
(if you can keep your hackles down). You learn about your writerly tics,
having them paraded and stripped naked in public. Images and ideas that
you thought were fresh as a frat boy turn out to be, to your dismay,
clichés. Classmates will pick up on things you thought were trivial,
and encourage you to reshape the piece in an entirely new and
more interesting direction. But what really happens is that the
workshop inculcates a different way of reading, a reading that assumes
the author isn't always making the right choices, and that you may know
better how to help her accomplish her goal.
Once you turn on this critical, writerly eye, its hard to blinker
it. There you are, reading Howards End, and you get annoyed with
E.M. Forster for his use of an odd, infrequent narrative voice. You
can hear someone in a workshop saying, But I want to know more
about who this narrator is. I need to know more. You read Alice
Munro and realize that she is breaking many of the rules of the short
story. Shes getting away with it. How? You stop reading and start
studying. You wonder how Walker Percy is able to use the first-person
present, which seems almost impossible to pull off, so effectively in
The Moviegoer. William Trevor manages to create a sense of threat
in Felicias Journey by using silences and absences. Maybe
he goes too far. Maybe it serves to bog down the narrative. Then you
catch yourself and realize that you, you little pipsqueak, are workshopping
William bloody Trevor.
Its one thing to read great writers and try to crib from them,
to steal moves, to copy techniques (especially if they work). But its
a different experience from reading to relax.
So you pull out your airplane novels, your mysteries, your thrillers.
And guess what? Youre no longer swept away by the plot, but youre
wondering how Ruth Rendell, writing as Barbara Vine, is able to set
up a creepy, menacing atmosphere from the first page. How does Harlan
Coben keep you turning the pages? Even when characters are poorly drawn,
when the language is rich with cliché, you think about how the
author has structured the plot. You pay attention to the length of chapters,
to how much direct dialogue is being used. You are alert to point of
view Ah, so hes using third-person limited omniscient
and notice when it slips.
So you turn to the movies, really dumb movies, for your R&R. But as
you watch Bruce Willis blow something up or Russell Crowe beat someone
up, you wait for the breaks between the acts. Theres the setup,
theres the disturbance that sets the plot in motion. Now it's
Act Two the trials and tribulations stage that culminates
in the Black Moment. In the final act, you look for enlightenment, anticipate
the climax, and wait for the catharsis. You cant stop the process,
even when youre watching Desperate Housewives.
Its a practice that is not unfamiliar. A psychiatrist friend told
me that early in their residencies, baby shrinks start using their newly
acquired knowledge by inflicting diagnoses on friends, family members,
and strangers. A person who used to be merely a self-absorbed boor becomes
an individual suffering from narcissistic personality disorder. Someone
who's easily excited is hypomanic. My friend, a tenured professor of
psychiatry, said that after youve practiced for a while, you no
longer do that. Then I reminded him that when wed met a woman
recently who seemed harmlessly eccentric, he had turned to me and commented,
You know, she could have schizoaffective disorder. Oops,
he said.
Architects cant look at buildings, chefs cant eat food,
and high-school quarterbacks cant watch football without bringing
to bear their training. True. But reading is, well, fundamental.
I expected to learn a lot from enrolling in an M.F.A. program in writing,
and I have. Yet the poignant, unintended, unexpected consequence is
that I have traded in one of my main sources of delight for the sake
of craft.
I wondered if it was just me, if it was my editorial training or a character
flaw that I couldnt leave my work at home.
Then Andrew Sean Greer, a graduate of my program and the author of the
extraordinary novel The Confessions of Max Tivoli, came to town.
I can never read novels for fun anymore, he said. Since
then I've heard the same thing from many other fiction writers. Drat.
Ive been reading a lot of nonfiction for pleasure recently.
Rachel Toor, a former editor at Duke University Press, is enrolled
in the M.F.A. program in creative writing at the University of Montana.
Her most recent book is The Pig and I: Why Its So Easy to Love
an Animal, and So Hard to Live With a Man (Hudson Street Press, 2005).
http://chronicle.com Section: The Chronicle Review Volume 52, Issue
11, Page B5
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