Guest Post: Mike Fischer on the Next Decade in Book Culture

by Mike Fischer | Jan-18-2010

As we wrap up the "aughts" decade, with digital books galore on the horizon (and the $195 Norton facsimile edition of C.J. Jung's objet d'art/culture The Red Book selling out around the country), the NBCC seeks the best guest posts about the future of book culture, including essays,interviews and free-range opining. The topic: How do you see book culture evolving over the next decade? This addition to the series is from NBCC member critic Mike Fischer.

Posting on Critical Mass back in 2007 regarding the function of reviews in our society, Richard Powers described reviewing as the “shared solitude of reading,” noting that the “engaged seclusion and slow reflection” which reading requires would become more valuable as the electronic din grew louder. That post, in old-fashioned hard copy, hangs above my workspace, greeting me every day when I come to work.

Powers wasn’t decrying the proliferation of blogs. But he was challenging those of us writing posts like this one to ensure that we continued, as Tess Taylor wrote so beautifully in her post in this series, to “make parks and wildernesses for our minds” in which we can read, undisturbed by the electronic chatter.

If reading is to survive as more than a cult activity, all of us need to create such sanctuaries. That means reading fewer blogs and sending fewer e-mails so that we can spend more time reading books. It means spending more time alone––learning anew how to really hear the writers we read––so that we can spend better and more rewarding time together.

Those who read this post––a group which, by definition, cares about the future of reading––will each choose their own way of embracing this paradox. For me, running the “long distances” that Tess speaks of has required limiting the time I spend reading blogs of any kind to 1 hour or less each day, and foregoing the temptation to start a blog of my own. It has meant doing without a portable electronic device. It has meant limiting my access to a computer; I do my electronic reading before or after work, and I do not have a computer in my home. It has meant keeping a paper and ink journal, knowing well that most of what I write there will never be read––and thereby having the freedom to work out my preliminary ideas about a book without having to worry what they sound like or how they will play or whether they run on to long or even whether they make sense.

To paraphrase Powers, I ultimately seek opportunities to share what I have learned in my solitude. I wouldn’t be writing this post, or reading those that others have written in this series, if I felt otherwise. But I value those conversations all the more because they happen rarely and I choose them carefully––not because I am anti-social, but because I firmly believe that we will never hear each other unless we first remember the sound of silence. 


      

Comments

Discuss this post.


your counsel could not have come at a more opportune time. i’m struggling with trying to finish several short stories, put a novel past its third rewrite, take on at least one review per month, and publish what I call a literary/commentary blog (which is a lot of fun, but pays nothing).  I’m thinking the blog must go ..... good for “branding,” as they say, but just too ephemeral, as in a handful of slippery sand.  cheers and thanks!

    – ray abernathy (02/15  at  15-Feb 19:02 -05:00)



My personal experience, like Ray Abernathy’s, has reinfored the clarion words in Mike Fishcer’s post. After losing my bread-and-butter editing gig at Kirkus Reviews (and attending Sree’s seminar at the general meeting) I began a blog. I have kept a pen-and-paper diary for 30 years, and although it has some personal material, a good deal of it was about books I was reading and theater I had seen. I bought into the “build your brand” theory and began keeping my diary online. It’s an interesting experience, and I’m not ready to abandon it yet, but writing things that will (possibly) be seen by others is a very different project from sitting down at night to reflect on the events of the day and let that take me where it will in a private diary. I found myself thinking time and again, “I’ll have to leave out the names,” or ,“I’d better save that for my petrsonal diary.” What I was writing online too often seems perfunctory or not entirely honest. But it’s also not a finished, revised piece of work like a review intended for publication. There are brilliant blogs, and I may yet figure out a way to reach (or at least aspire) to that level, but right now the form is not enriching me or my work. I got a lot more out of rereading Vanity Fair (the book, not the magazine) on vacation! So consider me undecided on blogs but definitely aware that the electronic world has its perils for anyone trying to carve out the solitary space necessary for thoughtful writing—and reading.

    – Wendy Smith (04/15  at  15-Apr 08:37 -05:00)


Page 1 of 1 pages of comments

Commenting is not available in this section entry.


About the Critical Mass Blog

Commentary on literary criticism, publishing, writing, and all things NBCC related. It's written by independent members of the NBCC Board of Directors (see list of bloggers below).

Subscribe

image image

Categories & Archives

Upcoming Events

NBCC Reads in Corte Madera, CA: August 04th, 2010

NBCC’s Name that Author, Brooklyn Book Festival: September 13th, 2010

NBCC at the Fall for the Book Festival at George Mason University.: September 21st, 2010

NBCC Reads at The Center for Fiction: September 22nd, 2010

NBCC Awards Reading, Minneapolis: November 03rd, 2010


NBCC Awards