When I was an undergraduate at Harvard, more than sixty
years ago, one of the members of the Class of '54 whom I knew casually was Paul
Matisse, grandson of the great Henri Matisse.
Paul's father, Pierre, was, I think, a quite successful art dealer in
New York, and Paul is himself an artist sufficiently well-known to make it into
Wikipedia. Paul's grandfather was apparently
notoriously reluctant to give away any of his creations, even to members of his
own family, but he had given Paul a pen and ink drawing of a young woman's
head, on paper, that hung on the wall of Paul's Eliot House room [in a suite of
rooms occupied also by Stephen Joyce, James Joyce's grandson, and Sadri (Sadrudin)
Khan, son or grandson of the Aga Khan.]
The drawing was scarcely more than a few lines, and must
have taken Matisse only a few moments to do, but it was absolutely mesmerizing,
capturing in some magical fashion the young woman's beauty. I remember staring at it and wondering how
Matisse could accomplish so much with no more than a few pen strokes and dots
of ink.
I thought of that painting yesterday as I was sitting on the plane coming back from Massachusetts. I was reading J. K. Rowling's new detective novel, concealed for a brief moment under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith. [If there is anyone in the blogosphere who does not know the name "J. K. Rowling," she is the author of the Harry Potter books.] The novel, which I am enjoying enormously, tells a story about a down on his luck private detective Cameron Strike, who is hired to look into the supposed suicide of a supermodel. It is pretty clear that Rowling has created this character with the intention of launching a series of Robert Galbraith novels, in the long and distinguished tradition of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Agatha Christie, Marjorie Allingham, and Josephine Tey.
Early in the novel, Strike hires a young woman, Robin, from
a Temp agency, to handle what little office work his almost non-existent case
load generates. Rowling devotes very few
words to Robin, concentrating most of her narrative on Strike's doings, and yet
by the time I was one hundred pages into the novel, I was totally enraptured
with her, rooting as hard as I could for a romance between her and Strike. [I am only halfway through the novel, so hope
is still alive.]
I found myself wondering, "How did Rowling do
that? Robin is no more than a few words
on a page. Unlike Strike, to whom
Rowling has given an elaborate back story extending over many pages, we are
told almost nothing about her, and yet the possibility of a romance between her
and Strike is one of the things driving me through the novel."
It occurred to me that it would be a fascinating exercise to
go back with a colored highlighting pen, mark every single passage in which
Robin appears, and then read them seriatim
in an effort to understand better just exactly what Rowling has done. Since I am naturally lazy, I probably shan't
do that, but it would be illuminating.
This is one of the many reasons why I am convinced that despite my
facility as an expository writer, I could never write fiction.
4 comments:
This post reminds me of this: http://www.art-prints-gallery.com/gallery/pablo_picasso/Taurus/img1.jpg
Marx is a better writer than Rowling by far
James, I took a look at it. Lovely!
I just watched Cloud Atlas on DVD.
It's an ambitious film, which not always achieves its goals.
Still, I enjoyed it, especially for the performance of a young Korean actress, named Bae Doo-nan (I had tears in my eyes when the character she played, a clone worker called Sonmi-451, made her last appearance on screen)
The soundtrack, too, is very good.
For what it is worth, I recommend it. In spite of evident execution problems, I found it intelligent and thought-provoking.
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