Friday, November 08, 2013

Reports of demise premature …

… Of Making Many Books There Is No End: Against Tim Parks's 'Death of the Novel' : The New Yorker. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

For many, if not most, writers, things like plot, character development, and catharsis are not narrative fallbacks but dynamic tools that give shape to the stories they’re passionate to tell or develop ideas that are uppermost on their minds. The art of storytelling is ancient, but it is a flighty kind of world view that automatically equates oldness with staleness. Missing from Parks’s essay is the recognition that talent transmutes tradition. Gifted writers can make accustomed methods feel as new and vital as a work explicitly devoted to structural innovation. In both cases, the object is the same: form is used in the service of artistic vision.
Indeed.

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