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Against grim-lit
Two
years ago, while preparing to go on holiday, I encountered
a problem many of you are going to face this summer.
I was in an airport book-shop, hunting for something
new to read. Like a lot of readers, I’m an omnivore.
I read literary fiction, detective novels, thrillers,
SF, children’s novels, biographies, science books
and romances. However, as I browsed through the shelves
with their wares displayed in tasteful sepia, boiled-sweet
pink and embossed foil lettering, I realised with horror
that there was nothing there that I either hadn’t
read already or wanted to read.
Every summer, critics are asked
to give their suggestions, and unless you’re an ardent follower of literary
fashion most are useless. Are you going to lug the
latest JM Coetzee through the airport? Well, only if
you’re the sort of person who enjoys eating brussel
sprouts. Are you going to be piling up the sort of
fiction that comes in pastel pink with a flower on
the jacket, or the cartoon of a girl? Only if you have
a very sweet tooth. You don’t want to read the
sort of novel that, if superbly written, offers an
awful sort of consolation – the feeling that
Life is even worse than you suspected. You want to
read something that is not chick-lit, but sun-lit:
something that is both literary and pleasurable, something
that lifts the spirits while engaging the mind. Dr.Johnson
observed that “the true end of literature is
to enable the reader better to enjoy life or better
to endure it.” While practically every Booker
short-list, and the entire range of Granta’s
new Best of Young British Novelists is strong on endurance,
it remains extraordinarily hard to find novels that
celebrate life, or at least leave you with a feeling
that it might include laughter, joy or hope.
This is what I found to be drastically
absent from those airport bookshelves. Every once
in a while a
literary novelist (usually female) writes such a book.
AS Byatt’s Possession was one, as was Rose Tremain’s
Music & Silence, Michele Roberts’s Sardines,
Sarah Waters’s Fingersmith. Sun-lit novels do
exist, and when they arrive they are greeted with cries
of joy from readers. Yet despite these examples winning
praise and prizes, more often than not the sun-lit
novel is despised by critics.
Sun-lit authors are among the most
distinguished in English fiction – Dickens,
Trollope, Jane Austen, EM Forster and Alsion Lurie
are among their ranks.
Their novels are not just romances or thumping good
reads. Yet to read them is to undergo that miraculous
transformation of mood, so powerfully uplifting that
Francis Spufford, in his book The Child the Books Built,
compared it to taking a drug such as tobacco or opium.
Once upon a time there was even a prize, the delightfully-named
Femina Vie Heureuse Prize, famously won by Stella Gibbons
for Cold Comfort Farm, which addressed precisely this
kind of audience. Now, it no longer exists. Kingsley
Amis, despite being best-known for his peerless comic
novel Lucky Jim, would never have won the Booker for
it. That was only given to him for The Old Devils,
a dreary rant about bores in a pub.
“I think it’s true that comedy tends to
be considered as lower than “serious” stuff” says
the Curtis Brown agent Anna Davis. “From an industry
point of view it’s all in the packaging and the
manner of publishing. The very decision to publish
in a commercial rather than a literary imprint (ie
Arrow rather than Cape, Harpercollins rather than Flamingo,
Michael Joseph rather than Viking) affects the way
a book is perceived by reviewers, WH Smith and even
its promotion in-house at the publishers. Literary
authors always want bigger sales, and commercial authors
want to be taken seriously but it seems difficult to
have it both ways."
Granted, but there are “commercial” novelists
such as Joanna Trollope, Nick Hornby and Joanne Harris
who are every bit as incisive and intelligent as “literary” stars,
yet who are unlikely ever to win prizes because they
are simply too enjoyable and life-affirming.
“We’re all suffering from the Victorian
purgative school of literature, which believes a good
book must be like bran – good for you, but not
something you enjoy,” says Joanne Harris. Although
her novels, all of them best-sellers since Chocolat,
are strikingly well-written and in the case of Five
Quarters of the Orange address dark subject matters,
she knows she is looked down upon by many critics because
she presents the reader with hope rather than bleak
despair. “I haven’t read a single piece
of good literature that didn’t make me feel better,
even if I’m crying my eyes out by the end,” she
says, “but I do have a feeling that political
worthiness is often a substitute for entertainment
value. Some of it is genuinely-meant, but there are
hypocrites riding that bandwagon.”
Being half-French means she has
a detached, amused view of how “English people are afraid to feel
good. They’re afraid to submit to pleasure. They
do things because they’re good for you – so
we get novels about 3 paraplegics committing suicide
that we’re supposed to enjoy.”
Elizabeth Buchan, author of the
best-selling ‘Revenge
of the Middle-Aged Woman’, agrees.
“While we were a predominantly Christian and
patriarchal society, sobriety and morality was bound
to be taken more seriously – though even so,
it’s notable that readers voted with their feet
and gravitated in droves towards the biting wit and
comedy of Jane Austen and Evelyn Waugh.
As fiction editor of the Mail on
Sunday’s YOU
magazine, Buchan is bound by the nature of the magazine
to avoid descriptions of violence and graphic sex.
However, she points out that “sun-lit” authors
such as Anne Tyler, Jane Hamilton, Maeve Binchy and
Margaret Forster address subjects such as suicide,
poverty and bereavement while bathing their readers
in tenderness.
“You’re driven to anger, but not to suicide.
You feel that suffering is affirmed by them, that they’re
taking humanity under their wing.
“I think it’s a very female thing, akin
to what women do in the home, which is why it’s
so spat on by male critics,” she says. “Love
and care comes into the writing, so that you laugh
and cry. It doesn’t mean avoiding tragedy – Shena
McKay’s The Orchard on Fire is about a difficult
1950s childhood, but it’s absolutely sunlit,
irradiated by joy and tenderness. Very few male authors
seem to have that sensibility, though Jon McGregor’s
If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things has it.”
It is notable that America doesn’t suffer from
the attitude that only the solemn is serious and good.
Perhaps it’s having the right to pursue happiness
written into their constitution, but Alison Lurie won
the Pulitzer Prize, their equivalent to the Booker,
and Anne Tyler, Elinor Lipman and Lorrie Moore are
no less loved, respected and rewarded for being perceived
as predominantly “sun-lit” novelists. The
great Canadians, Robertson Davies and Carol Shields,
were both short-listed for the Booker Prize here, but
Shields in particular was repeatedly attacked by critics
for being a “feel-good novelist” – an
accusation that relented only when it became known
she is terminally ill with cancer.
“I think it stems from the feeling that if you’re
reading for escapism, it can’t be art,” says
Kate Saunders. A literary novelist and former Booker
judge who crossed the divide to become a best-selling
author of romantic comedies such as The Marrying Game,
she points out that although “it’s easier
to imagine the lowest depths than the highest heights,
enjoyment is not a good reason to read a book. People
tend to overlook how ferociously well-written Cold
Comfort Farm, Diary of a Nobody or PG Wodehouse are – they
deserved to be treated with far greater respect. If
you look at Cranford, it looks like a tiny little novel
besides Middlemarch but it has a rival greatness. It’s
set in almost the same period and is also about a slice
of life in an early Victorian town, but because it
cheers you up Mrs. Gaskell isn’t taken seriously
as George Eliot is.”
She thinks that while readers are
always looking for the “lost Eden” of pleasure they found
in children’s literature, they are made to feel
that this isn’t respectable. “There’s
a lot of solemnity in crap.”
“You get far more solemn pats on the back for
reading Frank McCourt than Nancy Mitford,” Joanna
Trollope adds. Her best-selling novels were dubbed “aga
sagas” in the 1980s, a dismissive term that does
not begin to address their complexity, seriousness
and skill. “It would be easy to put down our
fear of hope or happiness in fiction to national philistinism
it to intellectual snobbery, but I think the trouble
goes deeper than that. I think our ingrained Puritanism
makes us deeply apprehensive of anything approaching
luxury, and we see hope as just such a luxury. There
is not just a moral merit in suffering but a kind of
security too – we’ll get applauded, we
won’t need to fear being reprimanded for failing
the moral standard.”
Yet publishers themselves are perceiving
a shift in the market. Richard Beswick at Little,Brown
publishes
novelists such as Beryl Bainbridge, Anita Shreve and
Jane Gardam. He says he is “increasingly allergic
to ‘grim-lit’. Apart from anything else,
it doesn’t sell unless it’s tragic or quite
brilliantly done.” This view is echoed by Alexandra
Pringle at Bloomsbury, whose list encompasses Margaret
Attwood, Jeanette Winterson and, most famously, JK
Rowling.
“I think the English have a problem with anything
remotely jolly,” she says. “We’re
all intent on being seen as serious and school swots.
Personally, I love books that make you feel good – writers
such as Raffaela Barker, Will Sutcliffe and Rebecca
Smith, who have an acute eye and a sharp wit, who have
no pretension and who write like young angels.” Yet
there is, she agrees, a “faint literary embarrassment” lingering
around such novels, even if there is no shortage of
appetite for them.
Marianne Velmans, publisher of
Doubleday (Transworld), is as indignant as many authors
at the perception that
literature only qualifies as such if it is gloomy. “Isn’t
there a confusion about the meaning of serious? I’m
not sure anyone looks down on comedy, or stories with
a happy ending, except the critics. Are Fay Weldon,
Allison Pearson and Joanna Trollope too popular to
qualify as serious literary novelists – or is
it because they happen to write about issues that concern
women?”
Yet even if Joanne Harris was once short-listed for
the Whitbread, she was never going to be on the Granta
Best of Young British list for 2003; like JK Rowling,
she is perceived as sun-lit. Beryl Bainbridge, despite
five short-listings for the Booker, has yet to win
it, and novelists such as Fay Weldon and Deborah Moggach
despite immensely distinguished outputs, have not been
awarded a single prize. Such neglect is a disgrace.
The Orange, which was supposed to do so much for women
novelists, has continued to support the same grim litany:
incest, murder, madness and misery are what its judges
prefer.
“There’s no chance of Fay Weldon or Vikram
Seth , two of the most sparkling novelists of recent
decades, winning the Booker Prize,” says the
leading agent Giles Gordon. “Since the 19th century,
the literary establishment has liked to believe that
novel is an art form which should make us feel guilty.
Instead, at its best, it should be a glorious celebration
of mankind.”
If these attitudes are being driven by critics rather
than publishers and readers, why not bring back the
Femina Vie Heureuse Prize to celebrate happiness? Why
should we celebrate mankind at its darkest, rather
than lit by the radiance of the sun? And, when so many
of the best sun-lit writers are women, why should we
continue to accept the strictures and standards of
grumpy old men?
Amanda Craig’s fifth novel, Love in Idleness
is a modern version of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
It will be published by Little,Brown on July 28. Her
website address is www.amandacraig.com.
Mslexia, Spring issue 2003
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