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Why Do Some Enjoy Reading Fiction?

There is no point in trying to hide it: I am quite pleased with myself. I read a novel, and even enjoyed the ordeal, overall.

Still, there were times when I was bored and frustrated. The only thing that helped me through those episodes was visualizing my suffering as "noble and heroic." The half-facetiousness of this lightened my mood. Fortunately the novel would then become more interesting in a couple pages, and I could take a break from my play-acting. 

This gimmick worked all through the novel. Many times, I kept hearing a voice say, "It's a far, far better thing I do than..." But say, where did that come? Wasn't it from some novel I was forced to read in high school, and therefore, probably disliked? Rather ironic, if true.

And yet there are many people who enjoy novels, effortlessly I suppose. What is their secret? Why don't they spill it to people like me? Maybe it will help to consider one category of successful novel-readers at a time.

1. Novel-readers who simply like the physical act of tediously and repetitively rastering their eyeballs over the printed page, while sitting in a chair all day. Maybe they like the cozy atmosphere of sipping on some hot tea, with a cat purring next to them, and some soothing, non-vocal music playing in the background. There are even people who can read when reclining. To some extent, reading a book for them is "chewing gum for the eyes," although that old witticism applies better to television.
 

2. Novel-readers who are not crazy about the physical act of reading, but who tolerate it because of the:

a) entertainment value of the stories. They must be easily entertained. Ninety-five percent of the shop-worn plots are Love Triangles, adulterous love triangles, unrequited love, revenge, mistaken identity, rags-to-riches, whodunnit, and violence. If the novel is modern, it will also be replete with lurid and sordid bedroom scenes.


b) what they can learn about how human personalities interact with the challenges in their personal lives. Human situations become a mini-sermon to them; a non-academic, concrete illustration of a philosophical principle.

Clearly, #1 and #2a type readers have nothing to teach me. Only #2b type people could. Next time I need to expand on #2b.

Comments

Wayne (Wirs) said…
It seems to me that great fiction involves conflict between human TRAITS. Fiction works best for this because real life humans are way too complex and hypocritical (too many traits) to clarify the novelist's message.

I was thinking the other day about Clevinger(?) in Catch-22 who stove to live in boredom (time passed real slowly) so he would feel like he was living longer (and Yossarian shouting, "Stop! Can't you see your killing him! to Nately who was drawing Clevinger into an argument).

Every character in Catch-22 represented a specific human trait/quality. I think if you read fiction in this manner---seeing the conflicts between specific human traits---it makes it much more enjoyable.
Read anything by James Mitchner. Start with Centennial then Alaska, then on and on. The most educational and fascinating novels I've ever read. Go to most any second hand book store and for a dollar you'll learn more then you can imagine.
Enjoy your travels.
Thanks Ed, Carol, and Gopher, but I won't let you get away with name-dropping. (grin) You need to explain Why Michener? What is he doing right?

(I've never read any of his stuff. He has written so many novels I was afraid that he had found a "formula" that worked in the marketplace, and that was all there was to him.)
How do you do it? I would fall asleep in 5 minutes if I were to recline when reading.

You read to relax? I can't imagine such a thing. Seriously. Like Samuel Johnson, who read like he was ripping the book's heart out, I get serious, intense, and impatient when I read.
John V said…
I knew I shouldn't have bought you "50 Shades of Gray" for your birthday. Also, your thoughts about Michener are spot on.
Anonymous said…
It's very arrogant to judge an author without even reading any of his work. Michener had a talent for bringing history to life, of bringing the reader into the story.
Dave Davis said…
Fiction let's you read about people who do what they should instead of what they feel like. The nonfiction I've tried to read ends up being so embellished that its hard to tell what really happened. Even some Author's "facts" about a historic event can become tinted.
People read fiction for the same reason they listen to music, watch TV, or go to the movies. They want to be entertained.
People watch FOX news or MSNBC because they want another version of the facts even though its supposed to be nonfiction.
"Conflict between human traits." That is a good way to put it. I will try to keep that in mind.

Of course I don't want to interpret the word 'trait' to imply finality or predetermination to the arc of a character in the novel. I need to be a little more optimistic than that.
Roger, who was "judging" the author? I challenged the commenter to give reasons for me to want to read Michener.
Unknown said…
I read novels for entertainment. Try one by John Grisham. Strictly entertainment. He was a lawyer in a small town, that became a writer of novels about law and crime in a small town.
Sondra said…
I collected and read the entire works of Tony Hillerman, because his mystery stories also include many Navajo legends, rituals, and ceremony, a culture that I have always been fascinated with knowing more about....so it combines fact with fiction...and he was just a great story teller!
No formula, just an extremely well researched story. Like reading a history book with a great set of characters thrown in. Spend a buck and try Centennial. If you don't like it I owe you a dollar should we ever meet. :-)
I think I've read everything he's written. Neve once disappointed.
Jim and Gayle said…
Well written historical fiction makes history all the more interesting. Michener did that well and so did Gore Vidal. I also enjoy alternative history and biography.

History itself is often another form of fiction in the sense that it is influenced by the subjective biases of the author.

Jim
Jim, it IS pretty hard for historians to keep biases from showing, except by restricting themselves to microscopic details. But that causes the book to becoming boring. Nobody likes drowning in small facts that don't really mean anything.
email from N. Beard:

not sure how to add a comment, so I'll go this route.

I've been a compulsive novel reader for 66 years, but I read them for different reasons now than I did as a child and young adult When I was young I read to experience life through other people's eyes, to go places and to do things in my imagination that I could not do or would not be allowed to do in real life. Uncle Tom's Cabin, the first half of David Copperfield, and War and Peace, all of which I read before I was 13, have had a profound, positive influence on my life.

These days I don't read much new fiction, with the notable exception of Jane Smiley's stuff. Novel reading requires the reader to surrender her/himself to the author. That has become harder for me as I age, because I usually decide somewhere around the second chapter that the author (a) has nothing to teach me, or, worse, (b) is an exploitive manipulator -see most best sellers. That's true also of so-called "high class" or " literary" fiction.

I do like mysteries and thrillers as a form of relaxation and distraction, but it's getting harder to find good ones. New thrillers are mostly gun and/ or terrorist porn. Mystery writers now too often blithely kill off likeable characters, and worse still, dogs!. Plus, yes, there are ghastly cliché-ridden scenes of explicit sex everywhere. ( Is it just me or are at least 50% of Kindle Unlimited books porn of one sort or another?)

In summary, alas, if you want to read worthwhile fiction, stick to Shakespeare and the pre-20th century classics, or resign yourself to kissing an awful lot of frogs. (Needless to say, I didn't last long in the local book club.)

Sincerely yours,
A Retired Librarian

P.S. Thank you for being one of the few people in the arid west who lives an ecologically responsible life.