Showing posts with label frederic raphael. Show all posts
Showing posts with label frederic raphael. Show all posts

Saturday, 28 April 2007

The World and the Word

I said I'd write about Monte Cristo, because of Perez-Reverte's Dumas Club - which is brilliant; a clever thriller, the cleverness of which, like The Name of the Rose or The Secret History (in my view rather over-rated), relies upon the reader thinking himself clever when he spots the references. The beauty of this approach is that it doesn't matter how many references you miss, because you don't know you're missing them. Any arts graduate - on the whole, about as ignorant a cross-section of society as one could hope to assemble - finishes Foucault's Pendulum or Dr Criminale convinced, entirely wrongly, that he's been reading something considerably more edifying than Ed McBain or PG Wodehouse. Confirmed in his ignorance, he can continue to think himself very clever. That's not to say that this cheap trick doesn't work on me. It does, and how. And The Dumas Club does it very well indeed.

So I shan't. I shall write about Borges instead, but only briefly. No other writer is as blatant in his appropriation of other writers, references to other writers, invented references in real writers, misattributed references in imaginary books, purloining of other literary forms - the philosophical essay, the cod history, the analysis of the imaginary secret society - as old Jorge. Gnosticism, mirrors and encyclopaedias and, above all, the labyrinth provide metaphors for the real maze at the heart of his work: the alphabet and the things which can be done with it. He is like a man unsure which side he comes down on in the debate about the Logos, or even the Aleph. Is the written word a betrayal of epic poetry, a way of guaranteeing the loss of memorised words which, being internalised, are closer to the incantatory, the sacramental? Is history a betrayal of the greater truths of myth, by being confined to the objective truth about particular events, rather than the instructive and universal illustration of examples which fiction (in the form of myth, parable, scripture and fable) offers? All books, all writers, all readers, are wound by him into one huge tangled tale, in which everything becomes a character; Alpha and Omega, it hardly matters which character.
He's pulling the same trick as Eco, or rather Eco and these other populist middlebrow thriller writers are pulling the same trick as him; shove in the odd reference to Paracelsus or Doctor Dee or Eliphas Levi, sure. Everyone's heard of them and no one's going to bother reading them. But the corpus of who to nick from and write about is Conan Doyle, Dumas, Chesterton, Stevenson, Scott, De Quincey, Shakespeare, Fantomas, Raffles, Baroness Orczy...
Because that's what we all really love. M John Harrison has started a thing on his blog [http://uzwi.wordpress.com/2007/04/27/the-list/ ] asking you to list books you need. We're all putting down big names, because they're true, but also because they sound good. But there's a lot of comfort reading there as well. Every so often you need to reread Jane Austen. But every so often you need to reread The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. And I omitted some of what Orwell called good bad books from my list (cowardice, intellectual vanity, I admit it), but also some books which may just be bad bad books. Remind me to write about Dune soon.
But Monte Cristo is a good, good book, even if it is also a transparent piece of wish fulfillment and a textbook melodrama. So I will write about it soon.

I had a pizza for my lunch, which wasn't very good. I stir-fried some chicken and noodles and stuff for dinner. That was, though I thought the chickens were eyeing me rather suspiciously as I made it.

We're thinking of moving house. The very thought of it is shredding my nerves, and will carry on shredding them no matter what happens.

sf: Starship Troopers, Robert Heinlein. It's the only language they understand.
crime: I Was Dora Suarez, Derek Raymond. You need a strong stomach, though.
unfairly neglected great book: California Time, Frederic Raphael
I'm reading: The Avignon Quincunx, Lawrence Durrell (well, I've got as far as the beginning of Constance). Then if not distracted, I'm going back to The Black Book again.
listening to: Mahalia Jackson (I believe!)

Tomorrow's Sunday (no, today's Sunday). Why not go to church? You've earned it. Because you're worth it.
εν αρχη ην ο Λογοσ και ο Λογοσ ην προσ τον Θεον και Θεοσ ην ο Λογοσ... I can't work out how to do breathings or a final s, but you get the point. (The Name of the Rose nicked that one, too)

Sunday, 18 March 2007

California Time

"People say that life is the thing, but I prefer reading." Logan Pearsall Smith

So I guess I'll just be writing about books, and films, and music and pictures, and secondhand consumption of other cultural detritus. There is limited dramatic potential in what I do, viz: sitting around drinking coffee and smoking roll-ups, while reading The Chinese Orange Mystery. But, as a justification for this typing into the void, I will put some random recommendations at the end of every post. These are notes towards the definition of the canon in their respective fields. What's the point of having opinions if you aren't going to be opinionated?
One very slightly puzzling thing happened today. I was checking something on the web and found a site offering quotations from Frederic Raphael, which described him as "best known for After the War and California Time". I having been wondering ever since whether it was supposed to be a joke. I love California Time, but I think it's the only one of his books which never made it to paperback; certainly all the copies for sale on abebooks are first editions, which rather suggests that there was only one edition.
You get a lot of hits for the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles with him, too. Perhaps he missed his true metier?

Today's recommendations:
Detective fiction: The Hollow Man (also titled The Three Coffins), John Dickson Carr
Science Fiction: The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch, Philip K Dick
Biscuit: Rich Tea