Michael Schmidt is a fascinating figure in contemporary British and world literature: founder of one of the major poetry presses and of PN Review, and holder of various academic posts in poetry and creative writing. He taught briefly at the university where I took my first degree, and friends who studied with him were awestruck. Now he has written what claims to be a âbiographyâ of the novel. It isnât. Itâs something much more peculiar and interesting. Itâs a clichĂ© that the internet is replacing books, and that Wikipedia is replacing reference works, but this is the first âpost-Wikipedia bookâ I have come across. Why?
First, itâs enormous. Itâs not for reading from cover to cover; itâs for the guilty pleasure (or student duty) of âdipping inâ (Schmidt writes of Philip K. Dick: before âthe internet came into our studies, Dick surfed the Encyclopedia Britannica and Paul Edwardsâ Encyclopedia of Philosophy, finding and forming associationsâ). And this book is indeed encyclopedia-like: you get a brief life of a writer (âthe Joyces lived a spartan existenceâ); you get a quick account of their major books. But most importantly, you get associations. Schmidt cites Jonathan Franzen in the introduction: âwhen I writeâŠI feel like a member of a single large virtual community in which I have dynamic relationships with other members of the community, most of whom are no longer livingâ. This book is Schmidtâs necessarily enormous and personal vision of what those dynamic relationships are: it explores, say, what holds Cervantes, Henry Fielding and Tobias Smollett in association with the seafaring tales of C. S. Forester and Patrick OâBrian, or what links, for Schmidt, William Golding, Margaret Drabble, Ian McEwan and J. G. Ballard.
You donât have to agree with these affiliations, but they are both illuminating and fascinating. And because the book makes no pretence to objectivity, the prose is engaging and witty. Schmidt makes a virtue of not offering a âtheory of the novelâ (although his claim that novels survive over time because of something âto do with form, language, invention and an enduring resistance to clichĂ©â seems a low-level âtheoryâ to which most people could subscribe). It is exactly these personal, debatable, critical associations done over such length that make this distinctive from any extant online resource.
But more than this â and this is the bookâs key selling point â Schmidt has chosen to supplement his own open and generous judgements only with the views of other literary figures. The bookâs criticism or guidance comes from âartist-practitionersâ: Joan Didion on V. S. Naipaul, W. H. Auden on Wyndham Lewis, Margaret Atwood on Martin Amis and so on, hundreds and hundreds of writers on writers. A very few critics â Frank Kermode, Lorna Sage â do slip in but only, as it were, by accident or because, like Gabriel Josipovici, they are also novelists. Part of a literary criticâs job, and in recent years it has been seen as a dominant part perhaps, is to set a literary work in its historical context. In contrast, this marvellous book achieves another critical aim: setting writers firmly in the context of other writers, aiming â as Harold Bloom said of his own poetry criticism â âto follow the invisible pathsâ that lead from novel to novel.
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The book is occasionally nasty to critics. Thatâs fine; writers hate critics. But one inadvertent bit of nastiness is harder to take: none of the many, many citations from writers on writers have references. While this serves to reduce the volumeâs overall length, it does mean that the setting of the citation canât be checked and thus the book is much, much less useful for students or (hereâs the real rub) their lecture-writing and recommended-reading-setting teachers. Perhaps the publisher could be persuaded to put the references online.
This apart, if there is a future for encyclopedic books âafterâ the internet, this is a model of how it should be done.
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The Novel: A Biography
By Michael Schmidt
Harvard University Press, 1,200pp, ÂŁ29.95
ISBN 9780674724730
Published 28 May 2014
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