Tuesday, May 31, 2005
HOW FAR CAN YOU GO?: That was the original and best title of the book I just finished, published in the US as Souls and Bodies. It's a novel (...sort of) by David Lodge, basically about how a group of young English Catholics respond to the Second Vatican Council and Humanae Vitae. These are going to be scattershot and rushed impressions, because I'm leaving to return the book to the library in about fifteen minutes.... This is a negative review because that's the final impression the book left on me, not because all of it is lame.
1. At first the book was both easy to read and compelling. There's a wry tone, sometimes but not often skating into too-clever-by-half (the "Snakes and Ladders" depiction of Catholic metaphysics, which is, honestly, much too easy a comparison to be illuminating). Because the prose moves quickly I didn't notice that the characters are fairly slight and their future trajectories perhaps obvious from the beginning.
2. This is almost always a novel about The Church, not a novel about (say) salvation, Christ, redemption from sin, or even, really, faith and suffering. Those last two themes do surface in the book, but they're seen through what I found to be an entirely this-worldly lens, a "muddling through, do your best" kind of lens. Which is fine, obviously that's one perspective on the world, but it's... not something I'm wildly interested in. There's nothing wrong with writing a novel that dates, but it's worth mentioning that this novel is, in fact, dated. That's really the point of this novel (as the final lines, noting the election of Pope John Paul II, make explicit): to capture one time and place from an entirely temporal, secular perspective. The interest lies, maybe, in the clash between the secular perspective of the novel (and, ultimately, the protagonists) and the eternity-minded claims of the Catholic Church.
3. Souls and Bodies is more honest about death than about sex; and the book's American title makes most sense in the passages on death. I found the book most powerful in two areas: the sections that depicted the aging body and the threat of death; and the sections that show how different ways of life often simply change one form of unhappiness for another. (There are at least two moments when a married character and an unmarried character confront each other, each embedded in their own specific unhappiness, and each thinking, That's easy for you to say.)
4. As far as sex: If you already have an opinion on Humanae Vitae, I can guarantee that you will already have heard everything this book has to say about it. I don't know if Lodge's presentation of the issues was fresher in 1980, but it's definitely non-exciting now. And it damages the novel in at least two ways: a. There's a several-page essay just jammed into the book's midsection, arguing against the encyclical; you can't get away with doing that in your novel.
b. The book is manipulative. I noticed this manipulation when I realized that although three couples in the book have children, only one child is actually given a personality or described at any length. This child, Nicole, is born with Down's Syndrome (which is implied to be a result of her parents' use of the "rhythm method"...), and although there are a lot of poignant moments in her portrayal, it's hard not to get the sense that she's there to be the Bad Thing that happens to Good People. I'm pretty sure that sense would be much less if any of the other children were more than just names.
5. I shouldn't make it sound like Lodge was unaware of the snakes breeding in the sexual-revolutionary garden. The book has passages very reminiscent of "The Ice Storm"--people who want to be good, but who have no compass, nothing but desire and fear. I do really like the British title (although his editor should have scissored a few of the explicit references to it within the text); it's clear that Lodge knows that it's possible to go too far. (Even if he doesn't know where "too far" begins.)
6. I wonder why that question--How far can you go?--is almost always asked to discern how far you can go from the Church. Why not, How far can you go for Christ? Perhaps an obvious point. But this novel, I think, assumes that everyone's perspective is basically, How tall do I have to be to ride this ride? What is the minimum necessary?, when it's quite clear that some people do end up asking, What is the maximum possible? ...And that strikes me as the more interesting question.
Have any of you all read Lodge? This is my first of his. I have Thinks... on my reading list for later. Am I off-base, am I missing the point, should I read his other books? Your thoughts welcome.
1. At first the book was both easy to read and compelling. There's a wry tone, sometimes but not often skating into too-clever-by-half (the "Snakes and Ladders" depiction of Catholic metaphysics, which is, honestly, much too easy a comparison to be illuminating). Because the prose moves quickly I didn't notice that the characters are fairly slight and their future trajectories perhaps obvious from the beginning.
2. This is almost always a novel about The Church, not a novel about (say) salvation, Christ, redemption from sin, or even, really, faith and suffering. Those last two themes do surface in the book, but they're seen through what I found to be an entirely this-worldly lens, a "muddling through, do your best" kind of lens. Which is fine, obviously that's one perspective on the world, but it's... not something I'm wildly interested in. There's nothing wrong with writing a novel that dates, but it's worth mentioning that this novel is, in fact, dated. That's really the point of this novel (as the final lines, noting the election of Pope John Paul II, make explicit): to capture one time and place from an entirely temporal, secular perspective. The interest lies, maybe, in the clash between the secular perspective of the novel (and, ultimately, the protagonists) and the eternity-minded claims of the Catholic Church.
3. Souls and Bodies is more honest about death than about sex; and the book's American title makes most sense in the passages on death. I found the book most powerful in two areas: the sections that depicted the aging body and the threat of death; and the sections that show how different ways of life often simply change one form of unhappiness for another. (There are at least two moments when a married character and an unmarried character confront each other, each embedded in their own specific unhappiness, and each thinking, That's easy for you to say.)
4. As far as sex: If you already have an opinion on Humanae Vitae, I can guarantee that you will already have heard everything this book has to say about it. I don't know if Lodge's presentation of the issues was fresher in 1980, but it's definitely non-exciting now. And it damages the novel in at least two ways: a. There's a several-page essay just jammed into the book's midsection, arguing against the encyclical; you can't get away with doing that in your novel.
b. The book is manipulative. I noticed this manipulation when I realized that although three couples in the book have children, only one child is actually given a personality or described at any length. This child, Nicole, is born with Down's Syndrome (which is implied to be a result of her parents' use of the "rhythm method"...), and although there are a lot of poignant moments in her portrayal, it's hard not to get the sense that she's there to be the Bad Thing that happens to Good People. I'm pretty sure that sense would be much less if any of the other children were more than just names.
5. I shouldn't make it sound like Lodge was unaware of the snakes breeding in the sexual-revolutionary garden. The book has passages very reminiscent of "The Ice Storm"--people who want to be good, but who have no compass, nothing but desire and fear. I do really like the British title (although his editor should have scissored a few of the explicit references to it within the text); it's clear that Lodge knows that it's possible to go too far. (Even if he doesn't know where "too far" begins.)
6. I wonder why that question--How far can you go?--is almost always asked to discern how far you can go from the Church. Why not, How far can you go for Christ? Perhaps an obvious point. But this novel, I think, assumes that everyone's perspective is basically, How tall do I have to be to ride this ride? What is the minimum necessary?, when it's quite clear that some people do end up asking, What is the maximum possible? ...And that strikes me as the more interesting question.
Have any of you all read Lodge? This is my first of his. I have Thinks... on my reading list for later. Am I off-base, am I missing the point, should I read his other books? Your thoughts welcome.
From the Washington Post:
more
Via Unqualified Offerings.
Also, via UO and, I think, the Volokh Conspiracy, a roundup of torture-related links.
Much of the discussion has focused on how to deal with the rise of a new generation of terrorists, schooled in Iraq over the past couple years. Top government officials are increasingly turning their attention to anticipate what one called "the bleed out" of hundreds or thousands of Iraq-trained jihadists back to their home countries throughout the Middle East and Western Europe. "It's a new piece of a new equation," a former senior Bush administration official said. "If you don't know who they are in Iraq, how are you going to locate them in Istanbul or London?"
more
Via Unqualified Offerings.
Also, via UO and, I think, the Volokh Conspiracy, a roundup of torture-related links.
When the ship runs out of ocean
And the blogwatch runs aground
Land's where we know the boat is found...
(Yes, there will be real posting later--definitely a book review, maybe other stuff--but for now, this is all you get.)
Church Marketing Sucks: How blogging can help the church. This is in the comments: "On my church's website I have set up a situation where people can search the bible for topics and the website keeps track of the most popular topics requested. From there I write a brief blog elaborating in more depth on the topic. This helps me know what my people are wrestling with (in an anonymous way) and gives me the opportunity to help them out." Via Relapsed Catholic.
Church of the Masses: Really neat post on adapting a story from one medium to another. In the comments box, there are some notes on Russian-to-English translation that might interest Ratty and other such Russophiles.
Telford Work: Is Christianity a cop-out?
And the blogwatch runs aground
Land's where we know the boat is found...
(Yes, there will be real posting later--definitely a book review, maybe other stuff--but for now, this is all you get.)
Church Marketing Sucks: How blogging can help the church. This is in the comments: "On my church's website I have set up a situation where people can search the bible for topics and the website keeps track of the most popular topics requested. From there I write a brief blog elaborating in more depth on the topic. This helps me know what my people are wrestling with (in an anonymous way) and gives me the opportunity to help them out." Via Relapsed Catholic.
Church of the Masses: Really neat post on adapting a story from one medium to another. In the comments box, there are some notes on Russian-to-English translation that might interest Ratty and other such Russophiles.
Telford Work: Is Christianity a cop-out?
Saturday, May 28, 2005
Where do the rockets find blogwatch?
Dappled Things: Re-posts his great resource, "bare-essential book recommendations for seekers." For all interested in learning more about the Catholic Church and the Christian faith.
The Holy Office (hee!): Comments on this Christianity Today piece on horror movies. My favorite quote from THO:
more
Oxblog: The military academies' "class of 9/11" graduates.
Dappled Things: Re-posts his great resource, "bare-essential book recommendations for seekers." For all interested in learning more about the Catholic Church and the Christian faith.
The Holy Office (hee!): Comments on this Christianity Today piece on horror movies. My favorite quote from THO:
Many critics have written that horror -- whether in movies or books -- is fundamentally conservative, because it inspires the audience to identify and revile an "outsider" -- the monster onto which our fears and hates can be projected. Intriguingly, Christianity Today's author instead sees horror as a chance to identify with the monster, and so to recognize an innate "monstrousness" within ourselves. At the same time, he sees an identification with the victims of horror movies, and the implication is that the monster and the victim are, in a sense, the same.
more
Oxblog: The military academies' "class of 9/11" graduates.
GIFTS:
more
I think the part where I choked up most was this, from a poem the wife wrote to her husband: "Very few Fathers can say,
'Yes, I was there every moment he needed me, I held him from
birth until death, his every action was a triumph, the span of his
life was never wanting for truth, and I know for certain that he
will rest for eternity in the palm of God's hand.'"
That "I was there every moment he needed me"--oh. Parents' desire always to be there when their children need them, and children's desire for their parents always to be there, is just about never fulfilled. (And in most cases, you do need to face some things alone and to allow your child to face them alone, no matter how hard it is.) This woman's testimony and her faith are amazing, humbling.
My friend Amy is a navy wife who's first child was diagnosed as anencephalic. She ws away from home and her husband was at sea for most of her pregnancy. This is part of a letter she sent out after the birth (and death).
more
I think the part where I choked up most was this, from a poem the wife wrote to her husband: "Very few Fathers can say,
'Yes, I was there every moment he needed me, I held him from
birth until death, his every action was a triumph, the span of his
life was never wanting for truth, and I know for certain that he
will rest for eternity in the palm of God's hand.'"
That "I was there every moment he needed me"--oh. Parents' desire always to be there when their children need them, and children's desire for their parents always to be there, is just about never fulfilled. (And in most cases, you do need to face some things alone and to allow your child to face them alone, no matter how hard it is.) This woman's testimony and her faith are amazing, humbling.
Friday, May 27, 2005
BOOOOOOOOOK!!! Barbara Nicolosi says:
linkity!
ACT ONE ON AMAZON!
I'm not someone who gets excited very often...but this is cool.
Here's a link to our new Act One book Behind the Screen. Published by Baker Books, you can place a pre-order for it NOW (Hurry! Rush! Quick!) and help us get our Amazon ranking up. Right now, we are hovering around 498,247 most popular book on the planet.
If we get enough pre-orders, the publishers will do a bigger initial press run.
The book is a collection of essays from eighteen of our faculty. The idea behind the book is to be a bridge between Christians working in Hollywood, and Christians out there on the other side of the screen. Each essay, hopefully carries with it a different way of thinking about culture, movies, television, and how the Church should relate to the same.
We have essays from faculty members like Ralph Winter (X-Men, X2, Fantastic 4), Scott Derrickson (The Exorcism of Emilie Rose), Ron Austin (Fr. Dowling Mysteries, Mission Impossible), Barbara Hall (Joan of Arcadia), Linda Seger (Making a Good Writer Great), Dean Batali (That 70's Show), Janet Scott Batchler (Batman Forever)....and others...and I'm in there too.
Please do your part to spur the new renaissance in the Church and in Hollywood -- buy our book!
linkity!
Thursday, May 26, 2005
DID ABORTION RATES INCREASE UNDER PRES. BUSH? Via Amy Welborn.
And: a site linking to lots of blogs where men and women discuss their abortion experiences, from a lot of different perspectives. Via Amy and After Abortion.
And: a site linking to lots of blogs where men and women discuss their abortion experiences, from a lot of different perspectives. Via Amy and After Abortion.
Wednesday, May 25, 2005
If you see the Blogwatch Child, say "Hammer down" for me...
Lots of people doing the book meme: Cacciaguida, Dappled Things, Jim Henley, Mommentary. All fascinating!
Amy Welborn: BBC America has no plans, as yet, to show a monastery reality show that sounded utterly fascinating. You can write to request it at the link she gives here.
KausFiles: "Sen. McCain Saves The Palm": "Why, after all, are so many people in Washington attached to the Senate's "right to unlimited debate"? Is it because the filibuster--which effectively requires a supermajority to pass anything through the Senate-- guarantees 'freedom of speech, freedom of debate and freedom to dissent in the United States Senate.' (Sen. Byrd's modest version.) Or is it because
Lots of people doing the book meme: Cacciaguida, Dappled Things, Jim Henley, Mommentary. All fascinating!
Amy Welborn: BBC America has no plans, as yet, to show a monastery reality show that sounded utterly fascinating. You can write to request it at the link she gives here.
KausFiles: "Sen. McCain Saves The Palm": "Why, after all, are so many people in Washington attached to the Senate's "right to unlimited debate"? Is it because the filibuster--which effectively requires a supermajority to pass anything through the Senate-- guarantees 'freedom of speech, freedom of debate and freedom to dissent in the United States Senate.' (Sen. Byrd's modest version.) Or is it because