I, too, dislike it: there are things that are important beyond
all this fiddle.
Reading it, however, with a perfect contempt for it, one
discovers in
it after all, a place for the genuine.
Hands that can grasp, eyes
that can dilate, hair that can rise
if it must, these things are important not because a
I picked up Mikita Brottman’s The Solitary Vice: Against Reading from the shelf of the St. Mark’s bookstore hoping that it was a different book than it turned out to be. After needlessly explaining the innuendo in her title, Brottman starts out with a promising premise: she’s tired of the piety that reading is good for you. I am too: I’d like somebody to explain exactly why reading is good for you. We’re prepared from youth (Fahrenheit 451, firmly entrenched in the high school canon) to defend against the enemies of literacy who’d like nothing more than to burn our books in the name of the future. These barbarians haven’t yet arrived. Like the battalion guarding the frontier in Dino Buzzati’s The Tartar Steppe, it’s possible that we’re guarding nothing while life slips away. Somebody, in the name of contrariness if nothing else, should be making the argument against reading.
high-sounding interpretation can be put upon them but because
they are
useful. When they become so derivative as to become
unintelligible,
the same thing may be said for all of us, that we
do not admire what
we cannot understand: the bat
holding on upside down or in quest of something to
Brottman’s not that contrarian; perhaps it’s foolish to seek such a champion in the written word. She’s not arguing against reading; instead, she’s arguing against reading novels. Her book is something of an inversion of Sven Birkerts’s The Gutenberg Elegies, a book not about the impending demise of print books so much as about how the novel shapes character, an argument he moves into the territory of memoir in his more recent My Sky Blue Trades and Reading Life. The predictable arguments are brought into play: Socrates wasn’t sure about poets. Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey shows up on cue to demonstrate how novels set up unrealistic expectations for the real world. The novel blinds people to the real world; the solitary act of reading makes the reader less social. Books read in school are boring; the classics are moldy and old and the worlds they depict often bear little resemblance to our own. Reading novels won’t make you a better person. Probably Hitler read books.
eat, elephants pushing, a wild horse taking a roll, a tireless
wolf under
a tree, the immovable critic twitching his skin like a horse
that feels a flea, the base
–
ball fan, the statistician—
nor is it valid
to discriminate against “business documents and
What best to do? Like Birkerts, Brottman trots out her reading history that it might serve as an exemplar for our redemption. “A man’s work,” remarked Camus, “is nothing but this slow trek to rediscover, through the detours of art, those two or three great and simple images in whose presence his heart first opened.” Brottman finds one of those images in Kenneth Anger’s Hollywood Babylon, which led her down the garden path of true-life tell-alls, eventually to find heaven in true crime tales. From these, Brottman reasons, we can learn more than from all the Gothic fiction every written. She might be right. We should read what we like: to the pure, all things are pure, and nuggets of truth can be found in the garbage of celebrities. “Life is worth while,” Nathanael West’s Miss Lonelyhearts writes before he gives up, “for it is full of dreams and peace, gentleness and ecstasy, and faith that burns like a clear white flame on a grim dark altar.”
school-books”; all these phenomena are important. One must make
a distinction
however: when dragged into prominence by half poets, the
result is not poetry,
nor till the poets among us can be
“literalists of
the imagination”— above
insolence and triviality and can present
My problem with Brottman’s argument is that it’s not a particularly difficult one to make. Critics worry about a general vogue for memoirs rather than fiction; journalists worry about fiction sold as memoir. It’s no longer daring to claim that a film can be just as rich as the written word. The staid gray pages of The New York Times regularly review video games. Maybe the New Criterion‘s still fighting these battles – I haven’t checked lately – but my sense is that Brottman’s tilting at windmills.
for inspection, ‘imaginary gardens with real toads in them,”
shall we have
it. In the meantime, if you demand on the one hand,
the raw material of poetry in
all its rawness and
that which is on the other hand
genuine, you are interested in poetry.
Not much poetry is cited in Brottman’s twenty-page bibliography, but the omission of Marianne Moore’s “Poetry” (grotesquely interpolated with my text) surprises me. Moore’s cross-examination of her art says more in less space than The Solitary Vice; it’s not, perhaps, a fair fight, but this is, after all, the Internet. “Poetry” begs to be re-made: now more than ever, the value of reading needs to be interrogated. Brottman’s book doesn’t quite get there; we still have Moore.
A coda, safely entrenched below the comment line against rhetorical flash: Brottman’s book isn’t entirely without virtue. In particular, there’s consideration of the essayist Richard Rodriguez’s relationship with reading. Through reading, Rodriguez finds his vocation as a writer; this process of transcending class barriers, however, strains his relationship with his family and distances him from his roots. You can’t go home again, Thomas Wolfe noted; as well as Wolfe, one thinks of Stephen Dedalus and the protagonists of any number of Künstlerromane. Brottman misses the opportunity of taking more length to discuss them (save Pip in Great Expectations, if he counts), which is a shame: there is an ambiguity here that deserves to be drawn out. The book can be a force for social change, even at personal cost: we want Richard Rodriguez to make it, even if it’s going to hurt him. There are moral stakes at play here, though Brottman skims over them. The reader is left in the position of Melville as described by Hawthorne in his journal: “He can neither believe, nor be comfortable in his unbelief; and he is too honest and courageous not to try to do one or the other.”
Thanks for the thoughts. This was a timely post to find in my Reader, as I’ve just fired off my most recent email in a debate I’m having with a publisher friend of mine. I admire my friend greatly, but I’m afraid he’s parroting Birkerts’s tired old arguments (reading makes one “serious” or “moral”, &c.).
A few years ago, I got a letter from a literacy organization looking for money. It was peppered liberally with quotes from (of all people) Nora Roberts, a big supporter of reading programs for children. These quotes always focus on the act of reading, or the medium (“books make you smart!”), but never the content, or the reader’s engagement with that content. I could read War and Peace and get nothing out of it (and have), or Nora Roberts and have it change my worldview (hasn’t happened yet for me, but certainly has for others). Just as I can watch a film stupidly, or television show intelligently, or do a close reading of Mario Bros. What’s with this value-laden media determinism?
But of course, Dan, you make this point much more eloquently above.
writing is thinking.
and reading is close-up observation of thinking.
and if you do not know the forces in society
which want us to stop thinking, and even to
stop any close-up _observation_ of thinking,
then i guess you have fallen victim to them…
-bowerbird
Perhaps, as Dan points out, reading may alienate one from family and community. But I’m tired of the piety that family and community are good for you. I’d like somebody to explain exactly why they are good for you. Maybe reading is a welcome escape from genetics and geography.
thanks bowerbird