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See what I mean though, you want the writing to serve the plot! :) I bet you don't have that expectation of, say, an issue of The New Yorker. There, the writing doesn't serve the plot, because there is no plot. I just wonder if some of Hugo's original audience arrived with an expectation a little more like how we would pick up a magazine than how we would pick up a novel. Perhaps not though - I have no real knowledge of 19th-century French readers!


Insert any magazine of course. It doesn't have to be unreasonably pretentious :) And yea, I feel you on the ungodly long thing. I'm not exactly racing to read the thing myself! But I think the expectations of unity thing is interesting. I do feel the same way. I am just wondering about why and if it really matters.

Haha, I thought maybe you were referring to the post-modern writing style on display in the New Yorker. It's certainly interesting to wonder about how our artistic standards came about. As it happens, I just started reading the Qur'an, which doesn't conform to many of our assumptions about how a book should be. For example, the chapters are arranged in descending order rather than according to any story.

I haven't read this. But your discussion of its digressions makes me think of Moby Dick, and the thought that (some) 19th-century novelists' technique of essential interpolating essays into long narrative works is not properly appreciated by modern readers, trained as we are that writing should serve story, instead of the other way around.