The odd thing is though that now my delight on being able to get hold of this excellent review is tempered by a mounting sense of guilt (it's pretty expensive) that I don't always read it all - lack of time - and an equally mounting sense of worry that I'll start to rely on it as a primary source of reading rather than actual books. I suspect this is what a number of the literati are prone to. I'm also concerned that this can easily become allied to an easy, lazy acceptance of ready-made opinions about books and writers in place of a genuine struggle to form one's own.
I noticed this when reading an interesting piece on John Steinbeck. It's easy to be grandly dismissive of a writer like Steinbeck whose faults are obvious and the article though informative tended to go in this direction. I had to struggle to remember the hair-raising power of The Grapes of Wrath - that extraordinary ending! - to keep myself in touch with the reality of the first-hand reading experience.
It's worth remembering when reading this kind of periodical that the worst insult the two tramps in Waiting for Godot can think of to throw at each other is 'Critic!'
5 comments:
Was it 'The Rescue of John Steinbeck'?
Hello sir! Just thought I'd leave a comment here haha, good marks for IOP okay!
Yes, Daryl, the Gottlieb essay.
And with reference to the IOPs: Good marks will be forthcoming - for good work.
For some reason I was able to get the article off the internet. Entirely legal, I assure you. Oh IOPs. Those were enjoyable!
I'm assuming you found it at the excellent site for The New York Review of Books at www.nybooks.com? (If I knew how to put funky links in comments then I would have put the link there, but it's beyond me.) I forgot they had that one on line also.
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