From: eye2@interlog.com (eye WEEKLY) Newsgroups: eye.news,rec.arts.books.reviews,alt.books.reviews Subject: BOOKS: The Art Of The Personal Essay Date: 16 Aug 1995 20:19:54 -0400 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ eye WEEKLY August 17 1995 Toronto's arts newspaper .....free every Thursday ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ BOOKS BOOKS THE ART OF THE PERSONAL ESSAY Selected with an introduction by Phillip Lopate Anchor/Doubleday, $22.95 paper by ALEXANDER FINLAYSON The novel and the poem, in the minds of readers and academics, are the serious literary forms. The essay? It doesn't count. Its image has not been helped by the justifiably frequent complaint that essay anthologies are just collections of literary guest-spots. How often have you opened a collection to find the contents comprise the off-cuts and bog-jottings of writers who made their names writing something other than essays? In his introduction, Phillip Lopate feels compelled to make the standard plea that the essay should be considered serious art. It comes with the territory, I suppose, but on evidence he doesn't really need to make it. There are literary greats here from antiquity to the present, but the material (in this age of personality-driven literature) makes you look past the names. Each essay is about something we all want to know about: the secrets of successful self-justification; the cycle of dependency known as "stylized enjoyment" (that is, how many dinner parties have you been to where this phrase would best describe your evening there); the pleasures of hating; and why no one in their right mind would take up a literary career. Then there is the contentious stuff: why leaving the cinema is the best part of the movie-going experience; how people who can't abide noise are of unstable mind; and how the frontier spirit, so coded into the North American brain, leaves millions of people without any idea what they want to do in life. The essay is eternally modern, conversational and cheeky -- which may explain why it remains outside the playroom of literature. It is plainly enjoying a revival at a time when other genres have become hidebound by their own conventions. What makes Lopate's set of essays such a breath of fresh air is their lack of artifice, their pure unliterariness. Take the piece by the Italian Natalia Ginzburg. Ginzburg writes like a child. She describes her own character, and that of her husband, in the sing-song way of a 5-year-old. He makes her feel like a mouse. As simple sentence builds upon simple sentence, we see a portrait develop of the way a marriage of unequal parts actually works. It's as sophisticated and "unfinished" as the best of fiction, and as memorable. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Retransmit freely in cyberspace Author holds standard copyright http://www.interlog.com/eye Mailing list available Books archives -----> http://www.interlog.com/eye/Arts/Books/books.htm eye@interlog.com "...Break the Gutenberg Lock..." 416-971-8421