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BEATRIX
A Book Review Review
Friday, August 19, 2005
Not to Mention the Dogpile on John Irving
AP book reporter Hillel Italie considers "the lack of great fiction" this year, with soundbites from industry insiders like HarperCollins' Jonathan Burnham:
"Looking across the landscape, there were supposed to be some literary novels that blew everybody away. But for various reasons they didn't quite perform."
Can we really assume a lack of aesthetic success from a lack of financial success? Or when Burnham says "they didn't quite perform," does he mean something closer to what Italie gets at by observing that even "anticipated novels such as Michael Cunningham's Specimen Days and Jonathan Safran Foer's Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close received mixed reviews at best and the fall doesn't look a lot better"?
"I think a lot of editors will tell you that 2004 and 2005 haven't been very good for fiction acquisitions. There weren't a lot of huge auctions or books that publishers got really excited about," says Geoff Shandler, editor in chief of Little, Brown and Co. "I'm afraid I must agree with that," says HarperCollins' Burnham, who adds that the number of "standout literary debuts have been disappointing." Notes [John] Sterling [of Henry Holt]: "There were no dazzling debuts."
From this,we can infer that Curtis Sittenfeld's Prep wasn't literary and all that hoopla didn't translate into a "dazzling debut." Now, I'm not buying that premise any more than you are--and before you naysayers point out that Sittenfeld got her share of pans, let's remember that no book gets universal acclaim; even critical darlings like The Plot Against America got dissed in certain circles. So this idea that books that get bad reviews "didn't quite perform" strikes me as somewhat odd.
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About RON HOGAN
Ron Hogan is a freelance writer who reviews books and interviews writers for publications such as Publishers Weekly. He is also the author of an illustrated overview of American films from the 1970s called The Stewardess Is Flying the Plane, due out from Bulfinch Press in November 2005.
About BEATRIX
How did this season's hot books generate their heat? And why do other novels surrounded by buzz turn into duds? Beatrix, a subset of my longrunning literary blog Beatrice.com, openly speculated about these questions in the form of "book review reviews" from January to August of 2005.
Beatrice; or, Where It All Began
I first launched Beatrice.com in 1995 as a venue for author interviews. In late 2003, I switched over to a daily blog of news and commentary about books and authors. What you see here now is essentially one side of that blog's original makeup, the side that dealt with how books were received by the literary culture. The full blog contains not only these "book review reviews," but news items about various writers and original insights from the authors themselves in the form of interviews, blog excerpts, and guest articles.
www.beatrice.com
Write
Me: ron@beatrice.com
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I'll Show You Mine
One of my regular gigs is as a freelance reviewer for Publishers Weekly. Although some people have a problem with anonymous reviews in PW, I'm all for them in general principle (though I think embargoes are a crock, but that's a different story)...anyway, I'd like to give any reveiwers who might be reading this the same opportunity to critique me, so I'll look into whether it's kosher for me to pull back the curtain. And I'll try to land some assignments with bylines, too. (In fact, if you're reading this, and you can assign book reviews...)
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