Sunday, February 15, 2015

Style has a story to tell too


If you've ever doubted the dramatic degrees in which language truly evolves, then you've never read Jane Austen back-to-back with Cormac McCarthy.

I did that recently. It was almost scary.

First I read McCarthy’s The Road, which I eulogized earlier on this blog. I couldn't put it down. I wanted to. But I could not. I loved it.

Writing like this is why:

…They’re going to kill those people, aren't they?
Yes.
Why do they have to do that?
I don’t know.
Are they going to eat them?
I don’t know.
They’re going to eat them, aren't they?
Yes.
And we couldn't help them because then they’d eat us too.
Yes.
Okay.

But then, Jane Austen was like:

“Her grateful and gratified heart could hardly restrain its expressions within the language of tolerable calmness.”

As soon as I read that sentence – which is from Northanger Abbey, the book  I started after The Road – I knew.

The different writing styles did two things alike: they each joined in to and became part of their stories. And they did so by creating the emotions of each scene in which they had been placed.

In fact – and this was what I learned – their writing styles became intimate with their respective places in their narratives. They drove their narratives. They did not just record them.

McCarthy’s setting is simply the end of the known world. That’s all. The earth had finally been burned to some kind of dystopian crisp, leaving a boy and his father to fend for themselves in a world returned to primeval savagery.

Austen’s scene is set among the privileged lives of the comfortable, socially well placed  of England’s Nineteenth Century (a world Austen parodies and plays with elegantly, by the way).

After getting over my shock in moving from McCarthy’s bleak smoking planet to Austen’s lavish social niceties, the different writing styles began to appeal to my sometimes dense sensibilities.

But the writers’ styles did more than make sense. They improved their respective narratives by writing to their scenes rather than simply describing them.

Straight-up, preferably impartial descriptive journalism was the rule of my early writing.

No wonder it fell so flat in my first tries at contemporary fiction. 

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Monday, February 9, 2015

Just a little red tricycle?


The low angle of the January sun reflected brightly on the little girl’s red tricycle. Gleefully she rode it as her mother walked beside her. They had just left a large Goodwill store.

I was driving by and just happened to notice. Traffic was light, and I quickly took in the scene.

The girl, perhaps three or four, was just beaming; her whole face shown with happiness. Mom,  carrying a load of clothes, wore a meek and gentle smile. But it revealed stress lines. They were headed to mom’s car, a Honda Civic that had seen better days.

The tableau touched me deeply, for I could see a possible story there. I imagined Mom might be a single parent. Perhaps medical bills, or needed car repairs had meant Santa would be late this year. This was the child’s Christmas. And I remembered a Christmas many years before when I was a single parent, too. I had lost a good job just before school started that year. I connected, for I had been there.

As I drove on, I prayed for mom and daughter. Whether they really were as I had imagined seemed beside the point, because prayer never hurts. We were well past Christmas. It was now the season of Epiphany. As I considered that, I remember how Mary, the mother of Jesus, had “treasured” things and “pondered them in her heart.” And now amazing things were happening. Mysterious men of the East followed a star. Angels sang in heavenly chorus. I pictured Jesus coming up from the baptismal water as the very heavens opened above him. The drama was afoot.

And so it was that cold winter day: not millennial drama, just a small scene played out on a suburban parking lot while its message nurtured an eternal truth. We sometimes may feel abandoned, lost, with little hope. Then one day, the truth sets us free. Epiphany is made personal.

So that’s what I prayed for the woman and her daughter. And a bright red tricycle became more than met the eye.


(WRITER’S NOTE – This was originally published on Jan. 7 a year ago in The Spirit, the weekly newsletter of St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church, Richmond, Va. It seems just as timely now as we near the close of the season of Epiphany. 

Monday, February 2, 2015

BOOK REVIEW: The Road by Cormac McCarthy


When I finished it, I realized I had no words to describe it … none that were adequate, anyway. But I shall never forget it.

Instead of words, I felt full of emotions. Words just did not work. I cannot explain The Road. You must do that for yourself. And you may discover that if you have never loved truly, you shall.
***
Will to live. Incredible tenacity. Resourcefulness beyond belief. Whatever the cost. And love.

The world, as we knew it, is no more. It is an ashen waste of some un-Godly holocaust.

A man and his young son are left. And they must move forward, to the south. And warmth. They hope.

At times. I had to make myself pick it up to continue. But I could not resist.

The pull of its narrative, and McCarthy’s post-dystopian style – maybe the makeup of  modern literature’s new best ever, we may one day say – captivated me and would not let go.

I’ve never felt that way about a book before.

You will see. You will see.