Essay: Bad Fiction (A Look at the Contemporary Novel)
By Hugh Blanton
A
lot of bad novels are being published today in the name of identity politics
and/or trauma porn; an author's identity being more important to acquisition
editors (and award juries!) than literary talent. Nothing gives me the feeling
of having been born too late than to see the long-lists of committees preparing
to pin their prestigious awards on the year's "best" novels, boosting
the fortunate finalists onto best seller lists. Give me any of the old
time-tested novels from authors now regarded as "problematic"—Saul
Bellow's The Adventures of Augie March, or maybe Cormac McCarthy's Outer
Dark, and I'm happy as a quahog at high tide. Novels then needed good prose
and good stories to pass muster with editors, today it seems as if Big Five
imprints are looking mostly for allies to aid themselves in the culture wars
being waged on social media and public radio. (Check any of NPR's "best
books of the year" over the last five years and you'll see what I mean.)
Of course I realize how ungrateful I sound to the cultural establishment as
they proclaim how lucky we all are to be reading books in these perilous and
exciting times. I don't doubt their sincerity at all in what they say—but they
are saying it because there is no rigorous criticism in literature today to
show them otherwise.
It
is becoming more common to find novelists attempting to illuminate and lift
their prose by exploiting poetry. Like watching a small child clomping around
in their parents shoes trying to play grownup, you want to pat them on the head
and tell them how cute they are, but also to knock it off. Sentences that were
supposed to have poetic meter ended up being nothing but clunky. Confusing
metaphor and simile render other sentences comical and bewildering. Isa Arsén's
2023 novel Shoot the Moon gives us a taste of it in a sex scene between
Annie, our protagonist, and her lover Evelyn: "I slid my hands up
and down her arms...my palms itching with purpose." (Itching?) Once
the reader get the vision of insects or rashes out of their mind, it goes on:
"I was too jellied to move in earnest for several slow molasses-minutes,
all my split-apart bones floating in the air around me." It gets worse:
"The trepidation in her eyes was a smear of doubt like oil on
chrome." Shoot the Moon was one of BookBub's Best Books for Fall,
Shondaland's Best Books for October '23, and Zibby Magazine's Most Anticipated
Book. Critic Rob Merrill writing for the AP said, "Arsén writes with real
heart and certainly demonstrates her talent as a storyteller." (Oil on
chrome?)
I
don't doubt Arsén has plenty of heart, but I dare to disagree with Merrill's
assessment of Arsén's storytelling abilities. Our main character Annie has
aspirations to be a rocket scientist and enrolls in The College and Academy of
St. Christopher the Martyr. However, she changes her mind and enrolls in a
secretarial school. As to why she, or anyone, would make such a drastic and
seemingly stupid decision we aren't told. It's simply a device Arsén uses so
that Annie the typist can show a bungling scientist at NASA his mathematical
errors. She corrects them quietly as she types them up, but eventually becomes
exasperated and confronts him. These inconsistencies ("plot holes" as
they're often called) are rife in fiction today; a woman in Ilana Masad's All
My Mother's Lovers has been carrying on several illicit affairs that she
wants to keep secret from her family, but then leaves letters detailing them
lying about where anyone can find them. A character in Gabino Iglesias's The
Devil Takes You Home is forced to become an assassin to pay off medical
bills when all he really needed to do was file for bankruptcy.
In
addition to mangled prose and bad stories, often we'll get a huge dose of pure
unadulterated insipidness. Shannon Bowring's The Road to Dalton opens up
with a prologue that instructs the reader to "Imagine this:" All we
are asked to imagine is riding up a highway to the top of a hill and to look
down upon a sleepy podunk. When the story actually starts we sit through thirty
pages of a New Year's Eve party where no one wants to be—side glances,
champagne flutes clinking, everybody silently wishing to go home. It's not
uncommon for novels to get off to slow starts, and a reader might look forward
to things getting going in the next chapter, but then all we get is another
dinner party with strained silences, stabbing at food, and forks scraping over
plates. We are mercifully let go after only twelve pages this time, but have to
go through it all again in a character's telephone conversation recounting the
strained silences and knowing looks at the dinner. Bowring's intent here is to
paint a picture of a sleepy boring town and if the reader can stay awake
through it all you really can't say she failed. Book reviewer Zachary Houle
writing for Medium says of The Road to Dalton: "This is sterling
fiction...", "That's how powerful her writing is.", and
"...a lot of this is Grade-A stuff." And that's part of the problem
with bad fiction—a lack of lively criticism. Reviewers passing out praise like
penny candy is not criticism, it's publicity. Our age needs a Dorothy Parker—a
critic whose reviews caused enraged publishers to pull their advertising from The
New Yorker in protest of her completely accurate assessments of their
books.
As
a reviewer, after going through so many bad books, I often have to lie down
with a compress of Cormac McCarthy on my head at the end of a long reading day.
His first novel, The Orchard Keeper, had an unlikely path to
publication—he sent the manuscript to Random House (not knowing of any other
place to send it) and it was published. Of course any unsolicited manuscript
sent to Random House today would go straight to the recycle bin, or more accurately
deleted from the inbox, so there's no chance for a naive first time novelist
getting their manuscript published by a major publisher. There are small
presses out there publishing great fiction from unknown authors, but without
the distribution and publicity departments that the Big 5 have, they toil away
almost in complete anonymity. In 2023 the magnificent novel The Initiate
by MP Powers was published by the independent publisher Anxiety Press. Mark
Vanner, author of The Bone That Swallowed a Man, said of MP Powers:
"I have not read a writer as capable of bringing a city to life the way MP
Powers does since reading Kerouac in my early twenties." With the mediocre
and the awful in the literary spotlight and taking up all the acclaim and
bestseller spots, novels like The Initiate go mostly unacknowledged. The
miracle of Cormac McCarthy up from the slush pile has no chance of repeating
today.
Novelists
tend to take themselves seriously, very few of them include humor in their
stories. And sometimes I have to say it's better that they don't. A poor
writer's attempt at humor will fall just as flat as any other narrative they
attempt. In the novel Sandwich by Catherine Newman our main character is
a post-menopausal mother of two named Rocky. Rocky describes her hot flashes:
"As if your twat is personally shoveling coal into a terrible
furnace." There's another stab at humor when Rocky's mother picks up what
she thinks is a hairband from a kitchen chair, holds it aloft and asks whose it
is. It's actually thong underwear left by Rocky's son's girlfriend. How it was
left on a kitchen chair is anyone's guess and how Rocky's mother could be so
obtuse as to mistake thong underwear for a headband is just a canard the reader
is expected to ignore. Of course you have to appreciate Newman's boldness in
attempting humor through a post-menopausal "twat" joke, but it comes
off more cringe than funny. However, the gross can be made funny in a skilled
writer's hands. In the short story "A Few Things" by Mather Schneider
(collected in his book Port Awful) a park employee describes his odd
coworker:
Roger
was obsessed with farts. Sometimes we'd see him walking by himself and suddenly
stop, bend over and start to pound his knees in laughter. Then he'd straighten
up and continue walking, chuckling and wiping the tears from his eyes. If you
asked him what was so funny, it usually turned out he had remembered hearing
somebody fart once somewhere. He claimed to have never once farted in his life.
He thought the whole idea of farts was ridiculous, absolute insanity. When
anyone farted within earshot of him he would go nuts with cackles. It was
infectious. Sometimes it made you almost want to go to work. The idea
was to save up your farts and only let them go in Roger's presence. A fart
without Roger around was a wasted fart.
It
helps when writing comedy to actually have a sense of humor as your starting
point.
If
I'm harsh it's because these mediocre writers are paraded around and heaped
with laurels while writers of true talent toil unacknowledged, on fire for
literature but working a day job to keep the bills paid. If I'm not a
cheerleader for fiction, there are plenty of other reviewers taking care of
that. How can my criticism be trusted if I only review writers I admire? If I
had to approach every book worrying about the feelings of an author I might as
well give up reviewing. Writers and editors have blocked me from their social
media accounts, I've been dogpiled by Ocean Vuong fans, at least one poet has
requested that their pieces be removed from a magazine that had published my
criticism. A critic can not be afraid to slay sacred cows. The Devil Takes
You Home was awarded the Shirley Jackson award, the Bram Stoker award, was
named a top 100 horror book by Audible, and was an Amazon Editor's Pick. And
out of the hundreds of books I've read over the last three years it's one of
the worst. Iglesias's prose makes one think of a student who must have flunked
out of a WRITE LIKE RAYMOND CHANDLER!!! course. "The darkness
around me stuck to my skin with the insistence of a child asking an
uncomfortable question." "Spit flew from his mouth like fat white
bullets." "Her chest rattled like an old car trying to do eighty on
the highway with a trunk full of rocks." And his best: "I knew that
death was serious business."
It
isn't just the bad prose that ruins Devil, the story is equally as
awful. Iglesias writes of a Mexican drug cartel money laundering scheme where
"folks" (he doesn't get any more specific than "folks") are
given money to take out a life insurance policy in the USA, "wait a few
months," and then fake some good news like an inheritance and ask for
their premiums back. In truth, American life insurance companies do not refund
premiums unless it is during the "free look" period which is
typically only about ten days. In another example of Iglesias's dilettantism
one of the most savage killers in the book owns a Smith & Wesson 500 which
she's very proud of. She displays it for her friends and exclaims, "You
know why this only holds five bullets in the barrel? Cause it doesn't need six
to kill!" Of course anyone with even a glancing familiarity with guns
knows that the bullets are held in the cylinder, not the barrel—even those
admiring critics who gave Devil rave reviews. Mulholland Books, Devil's
publisher and a Hachette imprint, calls Devil a "genre-bending
thriller." (The awards bestowed on it were awards given in the horror
genre.) Iglesias would do good to study genre-bending thriller writers like
Rusty Barnes who actually know the difference between a cylinder and a barrel.
Iglesias
uses the characters in his book as stand ins for his social activism. In one of
the more (unintentionally) comic scenes in the book, what looks like might be a
vicious fight between two of the book's Hispanic main characters and a group of
three white racists ends up being a lecture on racism and citizenship, with the
victorious Hispanic characters giving the defeated white characters a list of
Hispanic surnames to remember. The lecture is wrapped up with a slight of
Donald Trump. Iglesias throws in anti-classism rants too: "Poor people
have the same haunted look. We share something that makes us part of the same
breed regardless of color or language." This is the kind of poppycock that
middle-class and wealthy people who have never suffered poverty believe about
the poor. As anybody who's ever lived in a crowded, moldy tenement or a
run-down trailer park can tell you—poor people are more likely to stab each
other than to hug each other.
Trauma
porn and victimhood are two themes becoming more popular in fiction today.
Andrés Ordorica's novel How We Named the Stars is written in the form of
an apostrophe to the main character's (Daniel de la Luna) deceased lover (Sam
Morris). Apostrophes are almost always a poor form to write in, the constant do
you remember?, you did... then you... become a nuisance. Add to that the
main character's near constant lachrymose wailing and you've got yet another
hole in your wall from the flinging of yet another schlock novel. Daniel
receives a gift of school supplies his first day of college from his wealthy
roommate's parents. Seemingly a quotidian enough event, Daniel is traumatized
by it: "What I needed most right then: someone to hold me and tell me it
was going to be all right." When meeting someone who might be a potential
love interest after Sam's death, Daniel thinks, "I was alone with no best
friend to ask me how I felt about what was going on...". This kind of
solipsism makes Daniel seem more like a narcissist than a sensitive young man
in need of healing. Ordorica's poor prose also gets in the way of portraying
Daniel as sensitive: "I mumbled between crying and heavy breathing, my
nose filled with snot." Mucous does not a touching moment make.
Tatum
Vega, the main character in Ursula Villarreal-Moura's Like Happiness,
moves from scene to scene in the book on the hunt for things to be traumatized
and/or angry about. A journalist working on a piece about a man that was
Tatum's lover (M. Domínguez) many years ago contacts Tatum for an interview.
The piece is about Domínguez's mistreatment of women, and Tatum, after rooting
around in her memories, thinks she may have been mistreated by him too.
Further, Tatum recalls reading M. Domínguez's book some time back and thinks
one of the characters in it resembles her. Further again, she thinks maybe the
character doesn't resemble her so much after all. (During their relationship
M. Domínguez paid off a huge portion of Tatum's student loan debt and
even paid her travel expenses so she could travel with him.) Regardless, she
still pens a screed of how she kind of might've been mistreated and sends it to
him anyway. Villarreal-Moura puts on her poet's hat in Like Happiness
with near comic results: "acid ricocheted into my throat." "my
heartbeat deafening the roar of traffic." and, possibly channeling Dan
Brown, "night inky black." The favorite dialog tag of amateur hour,
"chortled," makes no less than three appearances. T. Kira Madden,
author of Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls, says of Like
Happiness: "[I]t's also a whip-smart critique of race in America, art
making in the age of neoliberal 'feminism' and the crushing humor of trying to
exist as a quiet person with big wants." (Ricocheting acid?)
Novelists
think of themselves as emperors with clothes and that they should be
revered. They infect their novels with politics and identity, but it's the
attempts at profundity that are the worst. From Ocean Vuong's On Earth We're
Briefly Gorgeous: "But I can't tell you why the dead outnumber the
living." Poet Amanda Gorman's attempt: "We posit that pre-memory is
the phenomenon in which we remember that which we are experiencing."
(Maybe she means deja vu?) These are sentences that at first sound
elegant and profound until you realize they're nothing more than vacuous guff.
In an example of true profundity, Cormac McCarthy's Judge Holden skips the
elegance and gets straight to the point in Blood Meridian: "War was
always here. Before man was, war waited for him. The ultimate trade awaiting
its ultimate practitioner." Catherine Newman's novel Sandwich was
of course a beach read and not meant to be taken seriously, but near the end of
the novel she still tries a Meaning of Life statement: "To say to each
other I know how you feel." The last time I heard that I was
eavesdropping on a conversation between two whiskey sippers in a dive bar when
one told the other his hemorrhoids were killing him.
Surrealism
is a difficult genre for novelists to work in—how do you get a reader to stick
with you through a story of impossible weirdness? The greats—Kobo Abe, Franz
Kafka, Poe—are still in print and anthologized even years after their deaths.
They've passed their torches on to contemporary surrealists, some that are
carrying it well (Steve Gergley, Spencer Fleury, Colin Gee come to mind), and
others that are stumbling and dropping it horribly. Molly McGhee's debut novel Jonathan
Abernathy You Are Kind is a poor, almost silly, attempt at surrealism.
Corporations seeking to increase the productivity of their employees are hiring
a government contractor to clean up their employee's dreams. Yes, the
government contractors enter these employee's dreams as they sleep and use a
vacuum cleaner to suck out the bad parts of their dreams, reduce their stress,
and make them more productive. Some of the dreams that are being "cleaned
up" are supposed to be terrifying, but the reader can't be terrified—it's
just a dream and it will be over when the sleeping employee wakes up. One
government contractor goes rogue with his dream cleaning vacuum—he enters his
ex-wife's dreams at night and vacuums up all her memories of their daughter so
that he can take custody of her. The ex-wife then ostensibly goes through her
days afterward wondering what the heck people are talking about when they ask
about her daughter. Molly Templeton, former assistant editor at Tor, gave Abernathy
a gushing review in Reactor Magazine: "It is a masterfully written,
pointed and polished novel, and it's also, somehow, a primal scream."
Reviewers
don't typically hit on typos they come across in books, especially if they are
uncorrected ARC's. But when the book your reviewing is written with such
terrible prose and you come across this:"took a swing from the
bottle." (Arsén's Shoot the Moon), or this: "highway thick
with lobster dinners." (Newman's Sandwich), you don't know if it's
a deliberate phrase or a copyeditor's oversight. (Neither of these two books I
reviewed were ARC's.) Do editors even question bad phrases that repeat
themselves throughout the book? In Tommy Orange's Wandering Stars lip
pointing repeatedly occurs (yes, lip pointing): "Opal pointed up to the
moon with her lips." and "She pointed her lips at a horse" and
"pointed over my shoulder with his lips" and "his lips pointing
the way we were headed" and "pointing my lips back where we'd come
from."
Of
course, some of the blame for all this bad fiction rolling off the presses can
be laid at the feet of the critics. Criticism seems to range from lavish pom
pom waving to non-committal reviews by critics afraid of declarations of
certainty. "What fools these readers be!" must be a common refrain in
the reviewer's minds as they proclaim each novelist under review a genius.
James Wood, once the terror of novelists everywhere, has been corralled and
tamed by The New Yorker. Here he is fawning over Emma Cline in the June
6 & 13 2016 issue:
Twenty-seven
years old, Cline is already a talented stylist, apparently fast-tracked by the
Muses. I don't mean this as the critic's dutiful mustering of plaudits before
the grim march of negatives. At her frequent best, Cline sees the world exactly
and generously. On every other page, it seems, there is something remarkable—an
immaculate phrase, a boldly modifying adverb, a metaphor or simile that makes a
sudden, electric connection between its poles.
Is
this a review or a blurb?
I
write criticism to discover what I think. My opinions are often overruled by
award juries and the book buying public, but both are notorious for their bad
judgment. I give unambiguous opinions so that readers can give me their trust
(or withhold it). Just as annoying as the perpetual cheerleading critic is the
quibbler—simply tell us—is it good or is it bad? However, if readers are
constantly being told "It is a masterfully written, pointed and polished
novel" and they come upon silly sentences and a stupid story, are they
likely to let novels continue to have a claim on their time?
Hugh Blanton's latest book is Kentucky Outlaw. He can be reached on X: @HughBlanton5
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