I Still Like Books

Okay, since I’ve become a freakishly devoted fangirl of Jonathan Franzen’s, I decided I should, in fairness, check out his old pal, David Foster Wallace – he who unfortunately suffered from such deep depression that he ended up killing himself. What a waste. But I guess I can kind of understand it. There are times when it’s only the children in my life, who didn’t ask to be born (my own, and the nieces and nephews) that make feel life is truly worth living. Really, sometimes only death seems like a relief. But don’t worry for me: I’m a coward above all things. Not only can I not stomach the idea of suicide – the particulars of it – I can not stomach the idea of death at all. I like living. I want to live forever.

At any rate, so I bought up a bunch of Wallace — thinking I’d go the Amazon route, but eventually did the very un-Franzen thing of buying it for my ipad. And while I like getting my money’s worth on the device, which sits here usually, I have to say, all things being equal, I prefer actual books. I like flipping through the pages. I like turning the pages. I like dog-earring them to hold my place. I like to flip forward. I like to feel the thickness of it. I like to hold a book that’s been read many times because traces of hands are there. I like how books stack up on shelves here and at bookstores and libraries. I like them as things in the world. They are environmental because they are endlessly recyclable. How can an ebook ever be a first edition?

Beyond all of that – it isn’t comfortable to read on it. I feel like I’m still online. When I read a book I like to escape from the online world. BUT when we go camping here in a couple of weeks, dragging an ipad versus a whole bunch of books is an interesting prospect.

So, David Foster Wallace – I’m reading an essay book of his called A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again (great title). And the second essay is already my favorite, “E Unibus Pluram” because it opens this way:

act natural

Fiction writers as a species tend to be oglers. They tend to lurk and to stare. They were born watchers. They are viewers. They are the ones on the subway about whose nonchalant stare there is something creepy, somehow. Almost predatory. This is because human situations are writers’ food. Fiction writers watch other humans sort of the way gapers slow down for car wrecks: they covet a vision of themselves as witnesses.

But fiction writers tend at the same time to be terribly self-conscious. Devoting lots of productive time to studying closely how people come across to them, fiction writers also spend lots of less productive time wondering nervously how they come across to other people. How they appear, how they seem, whether their shirttail might be hanging out of their fly, whether there’s maybe lipstick on their teeth, whether the people they’re ogling can maybe size them up as somehow creepy, as lurkers or starers.

The result is that a majority for fiction writers, born watchers, ten d to dislike being objects of people’s attention. Dislike being watched. The exceptions to this rule – Mailer, McInerney – sometimes create the impression that most belletristic types covet people’s attention. Most don’t. The few who like attention just naturally get more attention. The rest of us watch.

I love this dude. He’s brilliant. Already. Just a couple of paragraphs and it’s immediately apparent. Onward.

In Praise of Jonathan Franzen

There are very few books I’ve picked up in my life and been unable to put them down. Part of this is that, despite my own illusions to the contrary and desire to not be the person that I, in fact, am, I am not the world’s best reader. I tend to have great intentions – order them up off of Amazon, pile them up in bookcases and my nightstand, read maybe a chapter or two in and then the distractions set in. The internet. God knows what all. But Franzen’s books, The Corrections and now, Freedom are so goddamned good, so packed full of great sentences, glaringly truthful, humiliating, beautiful moments that I find I am pulled back to his world with both of these novels. I am hereby committed to reading everything else he’s written, but for now, I am about three fourths of the way through Freedom and let me tell you – page after page of the best writing I’ve ever read in the modern era. I’ll save some space for Don Delillo and Carolyn See. But for the people my age-ish? Franzen is the best. Not that I’ve read everybody. Not even close. So maybe I should just keep my mouth shut.

I found this on Wikipedia — Franzen’s rules for writing:

  1. The reader is a friend, not an adversary, not a spectator.
  2. Fiction that isn’t an author’s personal adventure into the frightening or the unknown isn’t worth writing for anything but money.
  3. Never use the word “then” as a ­conjunction – we have “and” for this purpose. Substituting “then” is the lazy or tone-deaf writer’s non-solution to the problem of too many “ands” on the page.
  4. Write in the third person unless a ­really distinctive first-person voice ­offers itself irresistibly.
  5. When information becomes free and universally accessible, voluminous research for a novel is devalued along with it.
  6. The most purely autobiographical ­fiction requires pure invention. Nobody ever wrote a more auto­biographical story than “The Metamorphosis”.
  7. You see more sitting still than chasing after.
  8. It’s doubtful that anyone with an internet connection at his workplace is writing good fiction (the TIME magazine cover story detailed how Franzen physically disables the Net portal on his writing laptop).
  9. Interesting verbs are seldom very interesting.
  10. You have to love before you can be relentless.

He is not an internet person. I grock that. Countless hours are wasted online, aren’t they? Where do they go? It simply entertains our giant, swollen brains — so many interesting things to read, find out, look at, listen to…He’s probably right, though. I can’t even go a day without plugging in. I’m not really proud of this.