"Most of what people read, if you go to the bookshelf in the airport convenience store and look at what’s there, even if it doesn’t have a YA on the spine, is YA in its moral simplicity. People don’t want moral complexity. Moral complexity is a luxury. You might be forced to read it in school, but a lot of people have hard lives. They come home at the end of the day, they feel they’ve been jerked around by the world yet again for another day. The last thing they want to do is read Alice Munro, who is always pointing toward the possibility that you’re not the heroic figure you think of yourself as, that you might be the very dubious figure that other people think of you as. That’s the last thing you’d want if you’ve had a hard day. You want to be told good people are good, bad people are bad, and love conquers all. And love is more important than money. You know, all these schmaltzy tropes. That’s exactly what you want if you’re having a hard life. Who am I to tell people that they need to have their noses rubbed in moral complexity?"And he pisses off Jen Weiner too.
Sunday, February 15, 2015
"...arguably the best living American novelist" speaks!
But I get scared when Jonathan Franzen deigns to lecture on moral complexity:
So much pisses off Jennifer Weiner.
ReplyDeleteI am slightly troubled that I recognize the meaning of YA. Oh, for the days when it meant Yelberton Abraham.
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ReplyDeleteI'm hardly a Franzen fan, but I greatly enjoyed this interview. He is absolutely right about how there's no room for gray areas in characters anymore. Weiner absolutely upheld his argument with her histrionic reaction.
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