Monday, August 18, 2014

Listening to Voices

           The New York Times Book Review editors asked Dean Koontz what book he thought was most "disappointing, overrated, just not good."  I didn't care that he listed Virginia Woolf's To the Lighthouse because I never liked it much either.  But he also says he stops reading when he realizes the author has embraced his character's nihilism.  But why stop there?  I stop reading when the author embraces his character's religious faith, Marxism, capitalism, feminism, politics, sexual preferences, psychological school of thought--just about any agenda.  I don't go to fiction to be instructed in the author's way of looking at the world.  I go to fiction to hear a voice telling me about people and places, moods and feelings, the sort of thing we used to call "universal" in our stories and poems.  And even then, if I don’t like the voice, I’ll stop reading pretty quickly.  There are simply too many books out there to bother with the voices you don’t like listening to.

Visions and Revisions at 81

            I miss toiling away contentedly at my quiet, and lonely writing desk pursuing topics in American literature.  I would be hard at...