At Open Letters, we're (as beloved Boston book-dealer George Goodspeed
used to say) in books. It's true that
we'll happily consider pieces on the whole gamut of artistic expression - one
of our most popular contributors discusses nothing but video games, for
instance, and in Locke Peterseim we're lucky to have the single most talented
movie reviewer working today - but from the beginning, our most passionate love
and main focus has been on in-depth book criticism of the type we've all so
much enjoyed in periodicals like The
London Review of Books and The New
York Review of Books.
Not for us, then, the daunting
task of running short stories - and just as well, since the editorial gauntlet
we'd represent would range from the fundamental ("Why isn't this
nonfiction?") to the lowbrow ("Why isn't this Edgar Rice
Burroughs?") to daunting ("Why isn't this George Eliot?") to the
challenging ("Why isn't this Anthony Burgess?") to the terrifying
("Why isn't this perfect?"). And likewise we usually steer clear of
the explicitly personal essay, although we'll make exceptions if the contender
is both excellent and, predictably, book-related (Scott Esposito's "On Packing Two Bags for Mexico" comes to mind, and there've been a few choice others).
Instead, we tend to concentrate
on essays about books: reviews, appreciations, reconsiderations. And although
that still presents us with a staggering variety of submitted work (so much so
that we hand off entire genres to their own separate spheres - Maureen Thorson
taking poetry, for instance, and our indomitable columnist Irma Heldman holding
the line with mysteries), it admits of a certain focus which we do our best to
sharpen. Luckily, we bring separate strengths to the job. Greg Waldmann is a
first-rate scrutinizer of the nuts and bolts of prose; if a writer starts
waxing about charmed magic casements opening on the foam of perilous seas in
fairy lands forlorn, that writer had better be prepared for Greg to ask
"So how do these casements work? Do they actually hang over these perilous
seas, or what?" Rohan Maitzen and John Cotter are our two published
authors; to any essay about some writer's work, they bring not only the spiked
truncheon of the editor but, crucially, the first aid kit of those who've been
on the receiving end of reviews. Sam Sacks, as all the book-world knows, writes
the Fiction Chronicle for The Wall Street
Journal and can therefore be trusted to know a hawk from a handsaw when it
comes to assessing the work of other critics. And there are persistent rumors
that I went to school with James Russell Lowell.
In putting together an issue of Open Letters Monthly and dealing with
the onrush of submissions, our gallant band is also helped by something my
fellow Massachusetts resident (and fellow devotee of Boston's mighty Brattle
Bookshop!) Sven Birkerts gently alluded to earlier in this series, in "Screening the Essay": if the
writer of a submitted freelance piece is going to waste your time, he'll make
that fact obvious fairly early on. Is the opening of the piece off-puttingly arrogant
("Like I used to say to Bucky Fuller...")? Is it maddeningly timid
("Bulgakov might be great - but really, how would *I* know?")? Is it
choked with jargon ("The meta-structuralism of Angus McGonagle is only
asymptotically eidolic")? Is it, right out of the starting gate, boring?
("I believe," Christina Thompson wrote in "Prose Matters," which also appeared earlier in this series,
"that nothing should terrify a writer more than the prospect of being
boring" - and she's absolutely right.)
Admittedly, good writing about
books and authors is an extremely tricky balancing act. Those who haven't tried
it can hardly imagine how exacting it can be, for instance, to make the
requisite amount of exposition flow smoothly in the narrative of the piece, as
opposed to the dreaded "info-dump." In “Second Glance: The Privy Mark of Irony,” look at how carefully Colleen Shea manages to keep her readers
informed about Francis Beaumont's play (which she immediately, engagingly calls
a "hilarious post-Modern, meta-theatrical romp”) The Knight of the Burning Pestle while simultaneously analyzing it;
she can safely guess that 99 percent of her audience will know nothing about
the work, so she must educate, examine, and exult all more or less
simultaneously - and it's masterfully done.
Or consider the equally delicate
task of conveying passion without pathos. Paradoxically, the central, animating
joy common to all readers - the squeal of "that was great!" about a
choice work by Gertrude Stein or George Meredith or Gerald of Wales - has no
place in serious book criticism. Not in its raw form, anyway: the good critic
must find a way to channel that bright burst of enthusiasm into prose that
sends the reader irresistibly in search of the author being discussed. One of
the best ways to do this is to humanize that author, as Stephen Akey does so
fluidly in “Tom and Em,” writing about Thomas Hardy’s
love-poetry to his late wife Emma. The opening of his piece is as starkly
assured as something out of Hardy's own prose: "After taking to her bed
with an indisposition on November 26, 1912, Emma Lavinia Hardy, Thomas Hardy's
wife of thirty-eight years, died the following day. It was then that he fell in
love with her." What do you do, Akey is smart enough to ask, "when
the love of your life unexpectedly dies, leaving you no chance to explain,
apologize, or redeem your mistakes?" No matter what the reader might
previously have thought about Hardy's poetry, they're going to want the answers
to that question.
Questions like that - pieces like
these - keep us reading at Open Letters
even when the hour is late and demands of our "real" jobs are piling
up. In fact, one of the highest compliments we can pay to an author
(unbeknownst to them, since they never see it) is to append "no edits here
- just happily reading along" while working up a piece for publication.
That comment invariably comes when a writer has forgotten pretension and
evasion and sensation and is just passionately telling the story of some
reading they love. That kind of craft is tough to achieve and even tougher to
maintain, but when it happens (and we can be pretty helpful at getting it to
happen!), those are the moments when we're all mighty glad to be in books.
*
Steve Donoghue is a Boston-based
book critic whose work has appeared in The
National, The Boston Globe, the Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post. He's the Managing
Editor of Open Letters Monthly and
hosts one of its book-blogs, Stevereads.
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