Reading Style

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Reading Style Page 19

by Jenny Davidson


  Friends Free Library of Germantown, 5–6

  friendship, 134–35, 171

  Fuentes, Carlos, Terra Nostra, 7

  Gaiman, Neil: Anansi Boys, 58–60; variable pacing in novels of, 62

  generalization, 97

  Genette, Gérard, 7

  Germantown Friends School, 5–6

  Gide, André, sight of eating a pear provokes fantasy of being a writer in Roland Barthes, 113

  Glass, Julia, Three Junes, 127

  Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, The Sorrows of Young Werther, 113

  Goffman, Erving, The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, 8

  grammar, etymology of term, 12

  Grass, Günter, The Tin Drum, 7

  Graves, Robert, 4

  Gray, Alasdair, Lanark, 5

  Gygax, Gary, AD&D alignment as version of Myers-Briggs grid, 180n1

  hatred, 173–74

  Hazlitt, William, 7

  Hill, Tobias, 64–65

  Hilton, Boyd, 97

  Himes, Chester, 61

  hinges, narrative, 64

  history, 144

  hoarding, 96, 98

  Hogarth, William, 157–58

  Hollinghurst, Alan, The Line of Beauty, 2, 135–36, 147–65, 167; on prose style of Ronald Firbank, 84–85

  Homer, The Iliad, 166

  Howard, Richard, 122

  Hume, David, 7, 69

  Hunt, Holman, 157

  Huxley, Aldous, held in high esteem by Anthony Burgess, 6

  hypergraphia, 96

  hyphenation, 57

  hypotaxis, 114

  idiom, novel as inventing, 19

  imbalance, 43

  impersonality, 166–67

  influence: of eighteenth-century satirists on later prose, 42–43; of Melville on Pynchon, 69

  innocence, 77, 160–61. See also experience, knowledge

  innovation, 141

  insincerity, and truth, 163–64

  “I remember,” 121

  irony, 41–43

  Ishiguro, Kazuo, globalized style of, 130–31

  Jakobson, Roman, “Two Aspects of Language and Two Types of Linguistic Disturbances,” 98–99

  James, Henry, 70, 147; childhood memoir of, 159; on death of Poe, 164; The Golden Bowl, 71–84, 89–92, 167; homage to, 158–59; “late style” of, 70–71, 162–63; The Princess Cassamassima, 69; vulnerability of style to parody, 78

  James, William, 79

  Jarrell, Randall, childhood reading of, 7

  Johnson, Samuel, Life of Pope, 43–44

  Jones, Diana Wynne, Fire and Hemlock as portrait of adolescence, 135

  Jones, Edward P., All Aunt Hagar’s Children, 66–67

  Joyce, James: “The Dead,” 48; Ulysses, 130, 132–33

  judgment, 8, 46–54

  juxtaposition, 125, 159–60

  Kafka, Franz, aphorisms of, 39–40

  Kahneman, Daniel, 54

  Keeler, Harry Stephen, prose style of, 19–21

  Kennedy, A. L., Paradise, 62–64

  King, Stephen, Needful Things, 128–29

  Knausgaard, Karl Ove, My Struggle, 175–76

  knowledge, 73, 147, 157–58; in The Golden Bowl, 77–84; and narration, 155

  Koestenbaum, Wayne: Jackie Under My Skin, 118–21; “My ‘80s,” 121–23

  La Rochefoucauld, François de, 39

  language, 75–76, 176; fails to capture reality, 103; feel of in the mouth, 9, 27–28; and identity, 107; limitations of, 169–70; as magic, 59; and reality, 175; and substitution, 61–62. See also style

  length, 86, 97–98

  Lethem, Jonathan, “The Beards,” 170–71; The Fortress of Solitude, 31–34; pacing differs across novels, 62

  letter-writing, 49–50, 163–64

  Levi, Primo, The Periodic Table, 137

  Lewis, Heather, House Rules, 169

  Li, Yiyun, 64, 67

  liberalism, 117

  libraries, 5–6, 7

  lipograms, 100

  Lish, Gordon, as editor, 26

  lists, 41, 63, 99, 105–109, 116–17, 126

  literature, and the self, 174–76

  Locke, John, 7

  loss, 136

  Lutz, Gary, 100; “The Sentence is a Lonely Place,” 26–27; “Waking Hours,” 27–29

  Mailer, Norman, 5

  Mandeville, Bernard, The Fable of the Bees, 43

  maps, 138–39

  Markson, David, 146

  Martin, George R. R, prolixity of, 98

  Mathews, Harry, 106, 121

  McDermott, Alice, 17–18

  McInerney, Jay, and stunt-writing dimension of second-person narration, 63

  Melville, Herman, Moby-Dick, 69–70, 132

  memorialization, 126, 144

  memory, 88–89, 106, 136

  Mendelsohn, Daniel, 132–33

  metaphor, 72, 75, 76, 79–83, 89, 90, 98–99

  metonymy, 98–99, 114, 119, 143

  Miller, D. A., on Austen’s style, 44–45

  Millet, Lydia, 15–16

  Milton, John: “Lycidas,” 112; Paradise Lost, 69, 132

  miniatures, 138–39, 144, 152. See also models, scale

  models, 140, 143–44, 145, 146

  momentum, 62

  Montaigne, Michel de, 109

  morality, and style, 13

  morality, of art, 162

  Mount, Jane, “Ideal Bookshelf” paintings, 135

  “mouthy” style, 27, 30–31, 34, 100, 120–21, 123, 132

  Munro, Alice, costs of canonizing, 15–19

  Murdoch, Iris, 4

  Nabokov, Vladimir, 5; Lolita, 29–30

  Nagel, Thomas, Mortal Questions, 8

  Naipaul, V. S.: A Bend in the River, 5; The Enigma of Arrival, 137; A House for Mr. Biswas, 5

  names, 107, 139; proper, 100, 128

  narration, 2, 44; and consciousness of individual characters, 147, 150; first-person, 65–66, 86; omniscient, 67; and perspective, 71–72; pictorial aspects of, 92; present-tense, 100; third-person, 41, 66–67, 111; and time, 64; unreliable, 141. See also third-person narration

  narrative, in relation to aphorism, 45–46

  narrators, 137

  nature, malignity of diagnosed by Thomas Bernhard, 172–73

  Nietzsche, Friedrich, aphorism quoted by Harold Bloom, 46

  nomenclature, 6, 119

  nostalgia, 121

  notation, 75–76, 83–84, 103; of interiority, 93–94; of numbers, 101. See also Roman numerals

  nouveau roman, 110

  novel, and criticism, 114; as proxy for world of ideas, 8; and short story, 62–66; subject matter of, 15–17, 147

  novelist-essayists, texture of thought in prose of, 7–8

  novel-writing, purpose of, 175

  numerals, Roman, 28, 76

  O’Brien, Flann, 5

  objective correlatives, in The Line of Beauty, 163

  objects, 118

  obscenity, 61–62, 180n6

  obsolescence, 129

  omission, 125; and dilation, 84–85; of letters in lipogrammatic writing, 99–103. See also ellipsis

  openings, 6, 29, 36, 147–48

  ordering principles, 105–106, 108–109, 110–11, 114–15, 121–22; alphabetical, 115; unconventional, 146

  Orwell, George, 7, 69; “Politics and the English Language,” 15

  OuLiPo, 99, 121

  pacing, 55–56, 88; and feeling of inevitability, 64; novelistic, 62–64

  pain, 166–67

  panic, induced by shortage of reading material, 7

  panoramas, 143–44

  paragraph, as unit of meaning, 9

  paragraph breaks, 171

  parataxis, 114, 123, 125

  parenthesis, 112

  Parfit, Derek, Reasons and Persons, 8

  Park, Ed, 62

  Parks, Tim, 129–30

  parody, 150

  Passmore, John, The Perfectibility of Man, 8

  pastiche, 58–59, 110

  Pelecanos, George, Hard Revolution,
128

  Penzler, Otto, 19

  perception, 71, 79–81

  Perec, Georges, 99–109, 121; “Attempt at an Inventory,” 105–107, 126; The Exeter Text, 101–103; Life: A User’s Manual, 135; A Man Asleep, 168–69; Species of Spaces, 103–109; A Void, 99–101, 108

  perfection, 170–71

  periods, rhetorical, 162–63

  person, claims of the, 44

  persona, narratorial versus authorial, 42, 46

  perspective, 144

  photography, 110, 137

  pleasure, 1, 135

  point of view, 141–44

  Pope, Alexander, 43–44, 151–52

  postmodernism, 110, 139; linked to vulgarity, 158

  Pound, Ezra, 4

  Powell, Anthony, A Dance to the Music of Time, 86

  prizes, literary, dislike of Thomas Bernhard for, 171

  proportion, sense of, 10

  prose, and thought, 173

  Proust, Marcel, 56, 84–85, 108, 110, 136; Perec reimagines, 104–105; on reading, 92–93; and Sebald, 143; Swann’s Way, 85–89, 92–95

  punctuation, 33, 156; commas, 73, 138

  Pynchon, Thomas: Gravity’s Rainbow, 5, 130, 131–32; influenced by Melville, 69; vocabularies of, 5

  quotation, 142

  quotation marks, 123. See also emphasis, punctuation

  Raymond, Derek, 57

  reading, 92–94, 176; addiction to, 3; childhood, 4, 7, 35; developmental stages of, 8; at different ages, 68–70; ethics of, 1–2; “mouthy,” 27–28, 30; pathologies of, 3; for pleasure, 6–7, 8, 133; speed of, 3; voluminous, 7; as way of life, 8, 176

  realism, 15–16, 153

  record-keeping, 126

  rejection, 85–86

  Rembrandt, The Anatomy Lesson, 140–41

  repetition, 41, 56–61, 63, 172–73; and humor, 57–60

  rereading, 9, 35–36, 69

  revision, 71, 98; by re-typing, 122

  rhetoric, 73. See also periods

  Richardson, Samuel, Clarissa, 56, 84, 97

  risk-taking, emotional, 171

  Rousseau, Confessions, 109

  rule-breaking, 180n4

  Sacks, Oliver, case studies of, 8, 97

  Sante, Luc: “Commerce,” 123–26; “French Without Tears,” 60–61

  Sartre, Jean-Paul, The Words, 109

  satire, 42–44

  Sayers, Dorothy L., 4

  scale, 89, 103–104, 138–39. See also miniatures, models

  scholarship, novelistic qualities of excellent, 8

  science fiction, novel of ideas and, 179n2

  Sebald, W. G., On the Natural History of Destruction, 137; The Rings of Saturn, 2, 135–46

  selection, 3, 9; as argument, 12–13

  sensation, literature of, 18

  sensibility, 15, 89, 136–37

  sensory experience, 113–14

  sentences, 71, 122, 146; of Gary Lutz, 26–27; glimmer of, 2; and paragraphs, 95; in Proust, 94–95; reading for, 11–12; as units of meaning, 9

  Sévigné, Madame de, 145

  Shakespeare, King Lear, 2, 144

  Shklar, Judith, 69

  Shklovskii, Victor, 7

  short story, traits of, 16–19, 31

  Shriver, Lionel, The Post-Birthday World, 21–25

  simile, 20–21, 58–59

  slang, 119

  sleepovers, 7, 134–35

  Smith, Adam, 7; love-hate relationship with Mandeville’s Fable of the Bees, 43

  Solomon, Andrew, originality of, 97

  Sontag, Susan, “Notes on ‘Camp,’” 75, 121

  sound, 71

  Spark, Muriel, 17

  spelling, 180n4

  sport, 6

  Spufford, Francis, The Child That Books Built, 4

  Spurgeon, Caroline, 5

  stage directions, 9

  Stephenson, Neal, Anathem, 179n2

  Sterne, Tristram Shandy, 61

  story, 29; as model versus vector, 64

  strangeness, literary style and, 20–21

  Strauss, Richard, and morality of taste, 155–56

  structure, 124

  Strunk and White, The Elements of Style, 12, 56

  style, 2; affiliated with sentences rather than character-driven fiction, 135; bleak, 169; clinical, 75; and emotion, 165; and ethics, 154–55; etymology of, 12; and experience, 18; experienced in time, 55–56; in the European tradition, 136; free indirect, 47–48, 166; and global literature, 129–30; as instrument of the self, 176; as key to the heart, 13; “late,” 70; and morality, 13–15, 21–23; not affiliated with narrative, 146; perfection of, 170–71; as performance of sensibility, 21; in proportion to occasion, 65; as repository of character, 12, 15; and the senses, 113–14; and sexuality, 161; and speech, 132; sublimation of emotion into, 167; as topic, 49; and writing, 112

  surfaces, 164

  sweets, 120–21, 144–45. See also chocolate

  Swift, Jonathan, 39, 42

  syllabus design, 69

  synecdoche, 5, 20, 128

  synesthesia, 119–20

  taste, 3, 9–10, 32–33, 116–17; changes over time, 54; erotics of, 153; morality of, 155–56

  taxonomy, 3

  teaching, 2–3

  temperament, 12

  Temple, Peter, 56–57

  tense, 125–26

  testimony, 170

  Thatcher, Margaret, 148–49, 161

  theatricality, 172

  third-person narration, 2, 136, 148–49, 166–67; versus first-person, 128; in relation to stage directions, 9. See also narration, first-person narration

  time, 87–89; and narration, 66–67

  Tolstoy, Leo, 68, 69; experience of reading War and Peace affected by duration, 55

  tradition, 3, 136

  transcendence, 98

  transgression, of subject matter, 147, 169

  translation, 100–101, 129–30, 137

  Trapido, Barbara, 169

  Trevor, William, 19

  Tyler, Anne, 62

  Van Zuylen, Marina, 167–68

  verisimilitude, 140–41

  vernacular, 130

  vocabulary, 4, 5, 153

  vocations, 175–76

  walking, 139, 172

  weather, 134–35

  webs, deformed by spiders’ drug intake, 96–97

  West, Rebecca, 7, 135

  whatnots, 118–19. See also placeholder words

  Wilde, Oscar, 14

  Wittgenstein, Ludwig, shares Barthes’ dislike for women in trousers, 117

  Woolf, Virginia, 18

  word choice, 24, 72, 76, 90. See also diction

  words, placeholder or dummy, 60–61, 118

  Wordsworth, William, 135, 151–52

  work, 145–46

  writer, fantasy of the, 113

  writing, in English for global audiences, 129–30

  World War II, 105, 137–39

  Zusak, Marcus, The Book Thief, 10

 

 

 


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