Book Critics Diss and Dish - Page 2

Tanenhaus also said that the Times Book Review is designed to be opinionated. “Rather than try to create this false, ‘objective’ middle ground,” he said, “we’ll cover the spectrum.” He cited his publication of Slate’s Michael Kinsley’s disemboweling of David Brooks’ specious “On Paradise Drive,” suggesting his section isn’t afraid to tread on a “colleague”: Brooks is the Times’s latest conservative columnist. “Our mantra at the Times is that books matter and the reviewer has to have something at stake,” said Tanenhaus, a ringer for ‘40s actor Van Heflin. He said he’s trying to publish reviews of all lengths in the Times, where pages actually have increased.

If only that were more generally the case. Johnson, citing recent cutbacks in space and budget for book reviews at the Orlando Sentinel (and, as is common knowledge, the Philadelphia Inquirer, Chicago Sun-Times and numerous other newspapers), suggested the blogosphere is the next growth area. But, he added, the writing in the blogosphere leaves much to be desired. Nevertheless, its growth and refinement will be spurred by writers alienated from the mainstream.

Johnson suggested that books still represent a cultural force. Richard Clarke’s “Against All Enemies” and “The Report of the 9/11 Commission” bookended a highly volatile political year, he said. In 2004, such books “drove the conversation,” and in late 2001, after the attacks of Sept. 11, the “book industry reflected the culture.”

Tanenhaus, too, cited the political situation, saying that the secrecy of the Bush administration has proved a bonanza for books, giving them new value. He also praised Jonathan Franzen’s “The Corrections” (a NBCC award-winner) as the novel with the most to say about the ‘90s.

Featherstone, who also contributes to the Times and Rolling Stone, agreed that books are a cultural force. “TV is so stupid now,” she said. “Even public radio has been dumbed down.” It’s heartening when “Perfect Madness,” Judith Warner’s book about motherhood, generates huge media coverage, she said.

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Article Author: Carlo Wolff

Carlo Wolff is the author of Cleveland Rock & Roll Memories and a long-time book and music critic. He works full-time as a business writer at Penton Media, specializing in articles about the hotel industry.

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  • 1 - John Freeman

    Mar 21, 2005 at 10:15 am

    Carlo:

    I think you misunderstood my point -- I don't believe that American fiction is inferior. I was simply pointing out to Johnson, who *did* argue it was a weak moment for American fiction, that believing that shouldn't prevent you from expanding the circle of books you think might affect American life -- from Orhan Pamuk's "Snow" to say Monica Ali's "Brick Lane." I mean, we had books by Joy Williams, Annie Proulx, Philip Roth and Russell Banks last year for starters. Not bad.

    The bigger question I wanted to think about was how do we allow fiction the space to remain fantasy when it seems more and more that a novel has to Say Something Important About Right Now to be successful.

    JF

  • 2 - Phillip Winn

    Mar 21, 2005 at 10:53 am

    John, But is it possible for a novel to not say something important about right now? It hardly seems go, given that every book I've picked up lately tries. I'm not sure if that's because authors have trouble leaving that out, or because publishers pick up on that, or if maybe it is the fault of we the readers, seeking out and spending money on the things which affirm our own views.

  • 3 - Rodney Welch

    Mar 21, 2005 at 11:11 am

    Nice roundup, Carlo, sounds like it was a good meeting -- and I especially like what Tanenhaus said. Just recently I reviewed this really awful book for a newspaper, and the editor has apparently freaked out for good about running it when he heard from someone else that the book was actually good. It’s good to see an editors who aren't neccessarily bound to conventional opinion.

    I do tend to lean toward Romano's view about experts in the field reviewing (presumably non-fiction) books -- I'd be interested, for example, in what Henry Kissinger might have to say about Jared Diamond, to cite only one expert who can write.

    Regarding Mr. Freeman's remarks: it's interesting that the novel of the year, Gilead, didn't really Say Something Important About Right Now. Of course, I guess you can argue than any book is relevant at some level, but that one really went against the grain -- this story of a dying preacher in the 1950s writing a letter to his son, pondering at length the nature of grace and forgiveness. The book has no little messages about George Bush or 9/11 or multi-culturalism; the thing that's weird about it, more than anything else, is that it's a great book that comes from a frankly devout point of view that is almost unthinkable among the literati. It's a very lonely kind of book when you look at it in the sea of American fiction of the past twenty years; it's the one novel I can think of that none of the other novels would much want to play with, which is what makes it such an exciting, bracing, unsettling read. There's nothing else out there lately (in my experience anyway) like it. It's a novel by a Christian that isn't, thank God, "Christian fiction."

  • 4 - Eric Berlin

    Mar 25, 2005 at 7:02 pm

    Very cool, very interesting gathering and review, Carlo.

    Big Picture question: was there any discussion of literature versus genre fiction, or was concentration more on non-fiction and political writing?

    Random question on a small point: Is there a Lower West Side in Manhattan? I've never heard of that before. Are you sure you weren't in the West Village? Is the New School located in the NYU buildings near Broadway and 4th St.? That's pretty much the Village or NoHo then. Just some NYC semantics for you.

  • 5 - Eric Olsen

    Mar 25, 2005 at 9:12 pm

    thanks Carlo, super report from live on the scene, much appreciated!

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