“Does a great writer have to have a tortured soul?”
That’s a trick question, right? If I say yes and then can’t
produce evidence of my own tragic life, I am giving up all possibility of
posthumous fame. (It would have to be after my death since I haven’t taken on
the mantle of greatness yet and time is running out.) If I say no, I sound
shallow and no one will believe I’ve read Dostoevsky, except maybe in comic
book form.
[I digress: Does
anyone else remember comic book editions of masterpieces? I swear I read The Man in the Iron Mask, Metamorphosis, and a couple other famous
novels in honest-to-god comic books when I was a kid. I also read Lulu and
Archie, so I didn’t have an entirely weird upbringing. But before graphic
novels, I swear someone had the brilliant idea of reducing some pretty tortured
stories to flimsy paper booklets to imprint gravitas on young minds.]
Anyway, back to the question, writers who can grab us and
hold us captive with their words aren’t merely people who’ve experienced a lot
of pain and suffering. The world is full of staggering sorrow, tragedy,
cruelty, and fear and none of that necessarily leads to art. The great writers haven’t
had more pain than other writers by some arbitrary measure; their gift is in picking
it apart and looking hard at it, then expressing what they observe and feel in
ways that become universal rather than interesting only to them. (This is true
of visual artists also, I believe.)
I’d like to put in a plug for happiness as an equally valid
road to greatness for a writer, by the way. If Hamlet’s a sign of Shakespeare’s greatness, so is The Tempest. Jane Austen’s characters
may suffer in their own minds, but she makes sport of them and ends her stories
with smiles. As Stephen King supposedly said: " “A tragedy is a tragedy, and at the bottom, all tragedies are stupid. Give me a choice and I'll take A Midsummer Night's Dream over Hamlet every time. Any fool with steady hands and a working set of lungs can build up a house of cards and then blow it down, but it takes a genius to make people laugh.”
The bottom line for me: Great writing is, for the reader, a
personal, empathetic, transformative experience wherever we find it and whether
or not it has a famously unhappy writer’s name attached to it. Which means, I
suppose, I have some chance of occasional, if not generally acknowledged,
greatness!
-Susan
Nice piece, Susan. Especially love the last graph.
ReplyDeleteI think the comic books that you're thinking of are/were Classics Illustrated. Which would take many of the great works of literature and put them in comic form for kids to read. I think it was a great idea, a way to introduce kids to great literature in a way they could relate to at a certain young age.
Oh how I love Stephen King - and you, Susan. Couldn't agree more.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you and Mr. King.I remember loving my 10th summer when every week I was allowed to by the latest Classics Illustrated. It was my treat, and certainly introduced me great books, and I've never given up my love of books.
ReplyDeleteThat's it: Classics Illustrated! I'm so glad other people remember these comics, that it wasn't a fever dream on my part. Isn't it amazing that someone did this? I wonder if I can find them anywhere. Yes, probably on eBay for gazillions of dollars!
ReplyDeleteLook what I found once you all gave me a clue! Major discussion with other people who grew up with the Classics series: http://www.abebooks.com/books/RareBooks/comics-moby-dick-albert-kanter-three-muskateers/classics-illustrated.shtml
ReplyDelete