The director of the Sydney Writers' Festival weighs in on the page turner/literary fiction debate on the side of literary fiction. We especially share her characterization of the opening pages of Enduring Love (the film of which we've decided to ignore):
McEwan's (although anyone who can read the opening pages of Enduring Love without their heart in their throat is clearly just not alive) and Hollinghurst's novels might not be described as "heart-thumping page-turners" but they weren't written to be. How fast the reader races to the end is no measure of a good book. We don't judge art by how quickly we can do a lap of the Modernists Room at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. We're rewarded by looking deeply.
We remember picking up a remaindered copy in London about five years ago, making the mistake of starting it in our room at 10 p.m. and subsequently sitting up until 3 a.m. devouring it, all along muttering, "No, no, NO ... don't do that!"
Comments