Nicholas
Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to
literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree
or disagree with him.
YOU CAN”T READ EVERYTHING
I am posting these comments for early February, but I am writing them at the end of December, and I am coping with an awful phenomenon that occurs at about this time of year.
You
see, books-page editors (they used, somewhat more pompously, to be called
“literary editors”) on national magazines, newspapers and various websites at
this time of year face earlier-than-usual deadlines. So they have to fill up
their columns well in advance of the time that they will appear. Everybody
wants time off for the summer holidays, after all. One tried-and-true way of doing
this is not to run more reviews, but to fill up pages with lists of the “Year’s
Best”, which can be compiled in the month or so before deadline. So from the Listener to The Spinoff to the local rag I am assailed by lists of the Year’s
Best Books.
Once
upon a time, I used to feel daunted by such lists. I would scan them and
discover that I had read only a few of the books listed. “Was I getting out of
touch with the literary culture?” I would anxiously ask myself. “Was I falling
behind on all the really worthwhile things I should be reading?”
Then
it occurred to me that I was already reading as hard and as much as I could
reasonably read. I have a house stuffed with books, old and new. I make it my
business to read old books almost as often as I read new ones, in order to get
some perspective on what is now being produced. This, I believe, is an asset
for anyone who regularly comments on books. On top of this, I am a frequent
reviewer: to give my stats for 2017 – I penned 13 reviews for the NZ Listener, 13 for the Sunday Star-Times and its affiliates and
5 for Landfall-Review-on-Line. On top
of which I do weekly (now fortnightly) postings of reviews of new books on this
blog. I estimate I read about fifty new books a year (approx. one a week) and
about half that number of old books. (The “Something Old” section of this blog
is sustained by my continued reading of older books, but also by my resort to
reading diaries which I have kept for years.) I further note that I do not
include collections of poetry in this count.
So
having acknowledged all this, I come to the stunning conclusion: YOU CAN’T READ
EVERYTHING. Nobody can. The best anyone
can do is to read as much and as widely as you can to remain in touch with the
literary culture. None of the reviewers or editors who compile “Ten Best” lists
of books have themselves read everything worthwhile that is available, after
all. Their lists are simply lists of books that have come into their ken (or,
for those who are not so scrupulous, books of which they have read other
people’s reviews).
Another
thought that occurs to me is this – experience tells me that many books which
are highly praised, and make it onto “Year’s Best” lists, are books whose
reputation does not endure. Perhaps you could go to an archive and pull out of
a back-room a dusty copy of a national journal from ten or twenty years ago.
Look up their lists of “10 Best Books of the Year”, and see how many are now
either unreadable or preoccupied with things that already mark them as period
pieces. Sheer novelty (or topicality) is at least one of the reasons many books
make it onto such lists. [UPDATE: I have just seen the "long list" of ten books up for the Ockham Book Awards. Oh woe! Oh misery! I have read only five of them. Mind you, none was a masterpiece, so my "Look-at-it-again-in-ten-years" rule kicks in.]
While
I am blathering on about the reception of books like this, there is another
matter that currently bemuses me.
Have
you noticed the sheer anxiety about the reading of books that is often
expressed on Facebook and the internet in general?
I
doubt that a day goes by without my seeing yet another posting on the internet on
the value of reading books, on the advantages that the regular reading of books
gives to children, on how important it is to encourage children to read, on how
good it is to give books as gifts, on how surveys show that regular
book-readers are better informed than other members of society etc. etc. etc.?
I
am not disgreeing with any of these propositions – quite the contrary – but to
me it signals a great anxiety about the survival of books, as we know them, in
the face of other forms of distraction, enlightenment and entertainment,
including the internet itself, of course.
The
more people shout on line about the value of books, the more anxiety they are
displaying about the survival of books.
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