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27 Jul 2008 01:41 pm
A Reader's Manifesto
By Patrick Appel
For Sunday, a paragraph from one of my favorite Atlantic articles of all time:
Everything written in self-conscious, writerly prose, on the other
hand, is now considered to be "literary fiction"—not necessarily good
literary fiction, mind you, but always worthier of respectful attention
than even the best-written thriller or romance. It is these works that
receive full-page critiques, often one in the Sunday book-review
section and another in the same newspaper during the week. It is these
works, and these works only, that make the annual short lists of award
committees. The "literary" writer need not be an intellectual one.
Jeering at status-conscious consumers, bandying about words like
"ontological" and "nominalism," chanting Red River hokum as if
it were from a lost book of the Old Testament: this is what passes for
profundity in novels these days. Even the most obvious triteness is
acceptable, provided it comes with a postmodern wink. What is not
tolerated is a strong element of action—unless, of course, the idiom is
obtrusive enough to keep suspense to a minimum. Conversely, a natural
prose style can be pardoned if a novel's pace is slow enough, as was
the case with Ha Jin's aptly titled Waiting, which won the National Book Award (1999) and the PEN/Faulkner Award (2000).
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