Re: Umberto Eco: Foucault's Pendulum

Originally Posted by
Colette Jones
Ooh, this sounds like a challenge. I believe I must be your polar opposite as I find the classics a mixed bag. Let's take Dickens for example - I've only read a few but I find them a bit of fun rather than thought provoking.
Yes, some of Dickens' novels are quite fun! However, there was certainly nothing "entertaining", in my opinion, about A Tale of Two Cities or Bleak House. For me, both of these novels were quite thought-provoking
and neither offered me any good laughs.
Bleak House, for example, is partially narrated by a young woman who is illegitimate, and who, over the course of the novel, becomes badly disfigured by a disease. Surely you couldn't find this amusing? I know I didn't. Then, her mother, who has been blackmailed by a nefarious man who will stop at nothing, runs away and is found dead in a graveyard. Entertainment? I suppose it depends on how you look at it.
I assume we're talking about the same Charles Dickens, but I daresay we are not talking about the same books.

Originally Posted by
Colette Jones
I've had fun trying to figure out The Turn of the Screw and would rate Henry James much higher in intrigue than Charles Dickens, but I wouldn't say that he had a deeper understanding of human nature than, say, Richard Yates.
Henry James is a master of psychological realism. I've never heard Richard Yates referred to as that. However, to make any judgements based merely on The Turn of the Screw would be remiss indeed. Have you read any of James' major novels: The Ambassadors, Wings of the Dove, The Golden Bowl, or The Portrait of the Lady? I haven't read Yates, but I find it impossible to imagine that he could have penned a novel on the same level with one of these books by James.
If you really want to debate this issue, that's fine--but please, read one of the novels I list above. Otherwise I simply can't have a meaningful discussion with you in this regard. To base an opinion on something as comparatively insignificant as The Taming of the Shrew simply isn't fair. Also, Washington Square (which I believe was on your list of 2008 reads) is what I would call B-rate James, at best (i.e., good enough, but nothing exceptional).
I don't mean to be harsh or take umbrage unnecessarily, but I do feel that comparisons should be fair above all else. Since you mention Yates, I assume you've read one of his MAJOR novels. To not give James that same benefit seems very unjust.
As for Dickens, unless you have a very twisted sense of humor, I just cannot imagine your finding Bleak House or A Tale of Two Cities funny. And yes, I do consider a novel in which one man sacrifices his life to save another (as in A Tale of Two Cities) thought-provoking.

Originally Posted by
Colette Jones
And don't get me started on
Wuthering Heights. (luckily you didn't mention Emily Bronte).

I only named a few people because I was merely trying to find examples. When I first read Wuthering Heights, I found it confusing. Later, I understood what Emily Bronte was trying to say. The narrative structure can be frustrating, and the novel is not pleasant to read. But I do think Emily conveys something about human nature that is interesting--and that is how closely aligned hate and love can be, and how easily pride can destroy us.
Stewart has recommended Yates to me, and I'm sure Revolutionary Road is a great book. But I don't think I'll be putting Yates in the same category with the classic novelists I mentioned any time soon. Just out of curiosity--in what way has one of Yates' novels changed your life, Colette? I haven't read any of his books....so maybe I really am missing out on something. I know that many books that are technically "classics" have changed my life, including Tolstoy's Resurrection and Dostoevsky's The Possessed and The Brothers Karamazov, Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth, James' The Wings of the Dove, as well as Mann's Doctor Faustus.
I'm perfectly prepared to accept that we simply have different vantage points in regard to books. But the Richard Yates argument puzzles me. If, for example, you had said that Salman Rushdie or Saramago was as thought-provoking as Dickens and Balzac, I'd have been more easily persuaded. But Yates? From the descriptions of his novels, I see nothing psychologically penetrating about them. He's compared to J. D. Salinger and John Cheever, both of whom, I must say, are hardly known for their depth of characterization or their treatment of thought-provoking issues. Rather, it seems Yates is a different sort of writer entirely. And maybe that's just the point--he appeals to you whereas these other authors don't. He is hailed as a "chronicler of 20th century mainstream American life," as opposed to James whose finest novels have been called "brilliantly
subtle and penetrating character studies."
The fact you appreciate Yates is not something I have trouble with as I believe that each person is entitled to have his or her own favorites where authors and books are concerned. However, when you start calling Dickens and James "a lot of fun," I must protest as that's not an accurate assessment of their writing.
All the best for 2009,
Titania
Last edited by titania7; 03-Jan-2009 at 10:40.
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