A reader’s beliefs

I believe that a work of fiction is not…

…a machine. It cannot be understood simply by breaking it down into its component parts. It lives in the reading.

…a business transaction. Once the book is in my hands, there is no customer relationship. The book owes me nothing.

…an exam. There is no such thing as ‘difficult’ fiction. There may be fiction that requires concentration, or setting aside preconceived ideas of how a work ‘should’ be – but it’s all there to be read. There won’t be a test at the end, and it doesn’t matter if I don’t see everything. What matters is opening myself to the experience.

…functional. There are times when I’d like a book to fit a particular bill, and sometimes I’ll find the right one and the right time. But many of favourite books do things that I may not have anticipated, which is why I try to let the book have its way when I read.

…mandatory. There is no  single book that I have to read, be it old or new. There are books which are essential to me, but these can only reveal themselves with hindsight. Reading is an ongoing process.

…an unfiltered view. Reading a book is like looking through a window, but even the plainest window frames and shapes what you see.  The fiction I value most builds that sense into itself: form is the window, and it is made to be part of the view.

…written for my benefit. The author wasn’t thinking of me when writing this book (any book); I ought to bear that in mind.

***

What, after all that, do I believe a work of fiction is? Just that: a work unto itself.  No matter how old, no matter how much has been said or written about it, the work remains, ready to speak anew. I just have to listen.

4 Comments

  1. A great post! Sometimes I think the way we study English Literature at school pushes this idea that all fiction is a puzzle to be decoded, and unless you have the skill it’s not for you. Which is a shame, because whether we appreciate it or not we all learn something (empathy, if nothing else) from reading fiction. I also like your point that it isn’t a transaction, nothing is owed once you have bought the book. I think in this digital age where content has become so secondary to its means of delivery that the privilege of reading the story, confronting another person’s mind, is lost.

  2. Nice post! I think reading should be an adventure if nothing else!

  3. Nice post. A work of fiction is a piece of art.

  4. Nicely put. I agree with every one of these. The second has a corollary – the author also owes you (me, us) nothing.

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