Isabel Allende and her mystery-writing husband, William C. Gordon (photo by Lori Barra) |
In light of the buzz storm caused by “literary” luminary Isabel
Allende and her apparent disdain for crime fiction, it might be time to ask why
we care. Is it because she finally wrote one and is using her “literary
credentials to sell it? “She also apologizes as if it is some sort of guilty
displeasure approached in much the same way a 4-star chef might approach an
assignment to boil hot dogs. So frightened she is of feeling merely mortal,
Allende now claims she her new book was intended to be a parody of crime
fiction. Someone forgot to tell The New
York Times, who reviewed it as if it were the real thing. The whole idea
she would parody the very kind of fiction she never reads adds a new dimension
to her reputation as a “magic realist.”
It’s all right for writers laden with literary awards,
Allende included, to undertake what some would categorize as crime fiction.
Many have and many have done well. My view is everyone is welcome. If it works,
it works. The proof, however, isn’t in
the name or reputation — it’s in the reading.
The following post, comments for new crime writers who worry about being considered
second class is taken from a post that first appeared here in June 2011:
“Because
you are a mystery writer, does that mean you are only sort of a writer? I once
attended a Private Eye Writers of America annual get-together. In the course of
leaving the buffet area, plate in hand, I was invited to sit down with a couple
of writers I knew of, more than I knew. They were both seriously credentialed,
talented veterans of the genre. Though I suspect I was actually older, I felt a
bit junior in their company.
“At
some point, one of them asked why I decided to write mysteries. Not
particularly used to using words without a keyboard at the tip of my fingers
and the ability to edit as I go, I responded by saying: “Because I couldn’t
write….” Before I could find the next word, they were laughing. What I had
implied, having gone momentarily adrift mentally, was that I believed it took
no writing talent to create mysteries — that it is something we do because we
cannot write “literary” fiction. Just so it isn’t left there, the rest of the
explanation, probably unheard because of the laughter, was that my attempts to
write other kinds of novels had been difficult because with so much freedom in
the form I wandered about on all sorts of tangents (as I am now). Without some discipline
I could write forever but complete nothing. I found that having some rules helped
me write. My initial foray into mysteries was to submit to the St. Martin’s
Best First Novel Competition. This gave me some guidance and a form. So many
words, completed by such and such a date — specific goals. Also, inherent in
mysteries, there are expectations, such as creating and solving a puzzle, which
is what most novelists do, anyway, “literary” or otherwise. Also, I liked crime fiction.
“However,
despite my long tangent, the point is relatively simple — there is no such
thing as a literary novel as a separate art form from the mystery or science
fiction novel or any other form. There are books that seem to transcend what
preceded them, that take us to new places, show us new things, allow us to
think in new ways.
‘Some
are so good they will be read for the next thousand years. Many will be
acknowledged as “game changers.” Most not. The good ones might even involve a
murder or two, or a trip to another galaxy.
Odds
are that you and I are not going to create that kind of classic. But it doesn’t
mean we are not writers and that we cannot aspire to that goal. And it means
that if we truly want to write, and we keep our minds open, we can learn from,
but will not be held hostage by, all the noise that surrounds us — including
fine writers who occasionally sound like self-inflating Divas.
2 comments:
Some of the best works I've ever read fall into the world of "genre" fiction -- Ray Bradbury's Sci-Fi, Margaret Maron's rustic little mysteries--I can even think of a couple of "romances" that were genuine works of art. Truth is, one could even call 'magical realism' a gimmick!
Thanks for the comment.I agree, completely.
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