It's maybe wrong to confuse lit fic with visible style or even so-called literary device. |
|
Yes, it is very wrong, I think. As you say, some of the best literary prose is incredibly plain, and that's an essential part of how and why it works so well. What makes it literary isn't what kind of writing it is, but that the writing has some kind of originality in itself, as poetry has: that no single word is just doing an ordinary job - it has to be doing something more.
I'd define lit fic in terms of the issues it deals with rather than stylistic quality
I must say I'd disagree here: I think lit fic is all about how something's written, but the subject/issues can be absolutely anything - to that extent it's not as subject-bound as genre fiction is.
and in particular I would say that one aspect of lit fic is that it's always concerned more with matters beyond the storyline than with the storyline itself. |
|
I think I'd qualify this as
as concerned with matters beyond the storyline, but I'm sure this is true.
I was at a Nick Hornby reading the other evening: he was flying the flag for not reading anything you don't actually enjoy. He made the point (though not often or loudly enough to my mind) that this is entirely subjective, not least subject to the circumstances you're trying to read it in, and one person's terribly plodding virtuous duty read is someone else's great joy. But he absolutely wasn't doing that tedious 'literary clap-trap/pretentious nonsense' line: he was agreeing that intellectual enjoyment is as valuable as any other kind of enjoyment of a book. He did say that he felt that some literary authors got the balance wrong between intellectual interest and enjoyment of the story, which I'm sure is true, and is where many people part company with lit fic - though of course that balance is different for every person with every book. On the other hand, talking about Marilyn Robertson's
Gilead he said it was a fantastic novel and very difficult to read, and that was absolutely fine, because 'she couldn't get the job done any easier'. His point was that
some lit. fic.
could get the job done easier but doesn't try hard enough to.
What he didn't say, which I would, is that while we should feel free to abandon a book we're not enjoying, it can be worth keeping going for a while, to give it a chance to warm up. How many books have we all read which in the end were wonderful, but didn't start that way?
Emma