Writers Read
by
Good writers read good books.
There is no getting around it. Of course being a good reader doesn't
necessarily equate to being a good writer, otherwise most publishers would be
publishing their own bestselling books, however, I don't the language they are writing
in. To understand what words are capable of, the limits, and how to stretch
those limits.
The giants of English literature
? Ulysses, The Sound and The Fury, Great Expectations, The Waves, all
take words and torture them, stretch them, use them in new ways, expanding
their possibilities to produce new meaning, greater understanding, deeper
feeling, epiphany. They turn the cliché on its head, put paid to the
caricatures of life we see on television, force their reader to reflect, think,
grow, and live differently. Without these books, great modern works like History
of the World in 10 ½ Chapters, Oscar and Lucinda, The Moor's Last Sigh or Captain
Corelli's Mandolin could not have been written. Each writer owes his craft
to those who preceded them and changes the world for their readers and those
writers who follow them. So reading well is part of the ongoing and permanent
apprenticeship for those who wish to write in a way which is more than simply
craft.
Writing which makes people cry,
think, desire, anger, laugh and carry your characters around with them as part
of their permanent memory bank; writing which is Art. If you are a Dr.
Frankenstein, wanting to bring your characters and meaning to life, to join the
really big authors in making meaning, then you simply have to read. It might be
a long apprenticeship. Good books are not always easy. Nor do they generally
give you that feeling that 'you can do this' which poor books might, in fact
you might end up feeling a little awed.
However, the short term pain is
more than offset by the deep pleasure of transportation into an original world,
by the long term gains of vocabulary expansion, greater clarity of vision, and
a heightened sense of what is possible with words.
So how do you find out about
really good books? How do you choose wisely so that your investment of time is
worthwhile? After all if you are reading, writing, doing something else to
bring in money - since writing well is often not lucrative in the first
instance unless you are very lucky - and possibly raising a family and dealing
with the daily imperatives of keeping body fed and home clean, juggling time is
always an issue. Well, I'm a compulsive. I read anything and everything from
cereal boxes to historical tomes, but I also try to discriminate based on the
genre I'm reading. If it is going to be a serious read, I'll pick writers who I
know are good, based either on recommendations of like-minded readers or past
experience, although some of my best finds have been serendipitous so I have to
admit that I have on occasion judged a book by the blurb on its cover. I'm
lucky though in that I've been reading so long that it is as natural to me as
breathing (nearly) and I can start and stop and read in the most extenuating
circumstances (in fact reading helps me deal with extenuating circumstances
better). If this isn't the case for you, perhaps you need a guide.
Find a good reviewer whose work
you trust and let them guide you. There are plenty to choose from on the
internet and in print. Some of the more well known review sites are:
http://www.nybooks.com/nyrev/index.html (NY Review of Books)
http://www.nytimes.com/books/ (NY Times Book Reviews)
http://www.boston.com/globe/living/bookreviews/ (Boston Globe Reviews)
http://www.bookwire.com/ (Bookwire ? Bowker's guide to anything in print)
http://www.bookspot.com/ (The Bookspot, which also has other links, award
winners, bio details and more)
http://www.bookreporter.com/ (Book Reporter ? a range of reviews, interviews,
contests and more)
http://www.bookpage.com/(popular book review magazine)
And of course my own sites: www.compulsivereader.com which looks at really good
new novels from all over the world and http://www.suite101.com/welcome.cfm/10111
which looks at Australian literature.
You could also go by the prize winners, for example The Booker Prize (including
the nominees) is almost always a good guide to great fiction, although you
would, of course, miss out on all the non-prize winning books that way (never
mind ? can't read everything). For details on the Booker, see:
http://www.literature-awards.com/booker_prize.html. Of course there is always
your local bookshop recommendation, from Amazon to the little guy with the
great personalized service down the road who probably knows your reading tastes
if you visit often enough. However you find great books, enjoy your
apprenticeship.
If you love reading enough to do
it under any circumstances, in whatever snatches of time you can afford, and
write when you aren't reading, you are going to eventually produce something
wonderful. A shining gem which will change your readers' perception of the
world; an epiphany.
Copyright 2002 Magdalena Ball
About the Author:
About the author: Magdalena Ball is content manager for The Compulsive Reader, Preschool Entertainment, and
is the author of The
Art of Assessment: How to Review Anything. Her fiction, poetry, reviews,
interviews, and essays have appeared in many on-line and print publications.