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Sally
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Feb 16, 2014 09:23PM

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In fact, this is an enormous bugbear of mine. Without sounding righteous or preachy, I'll resolutely stick with something once I've embarked on it. Perhaps it's just perfectionist completion-anxiety, but I just can't bear not hanging in there if I'm not instantly hooked.
Some of the most seminal and rewarding texts I've ever read have a slow-ish start: in fact, my two favourite tomes are Catton's The Luminaries and Arundhati Roy's The God of Small Things. (Both are beautiful, slight texts; with the disproportionate payoff in the latter chapters). So MANY of my favourite books take a while to bed in, or gain traction, or establish themselves; with rewards that pay dividends later on (Atwood's The Blind Assassin, for instance). If it's plot-driven airport-fiction perhaps, but I think anything slightly more literary of character-focused deserves a more longitudinally-invested approach.
In The Luminaries, to pursue the analogy more relentlessly; the capital investment (in character and interchange, in business subterfuge and shipping transactions) pays off richly as the narrative gains momentum. It starts rhythmic, academic, metered; it ultimately becomes pacy and climactic. The time and the thought and the reason transforms itself into breast-clutching; unputdownable stuff: dividends if they ever were. And - precisely because of this initial investment - it's far richer and more multi-layered than a plot-driven doorstop of a novel. One finishes feeling replete and satisfied in the whollest of senses.
I also feel that one can't ever confidently pass a justified negative judgement on a text (filmic, literary, poetic) without having imbibed it wholly. Where does it go, where does it end? If it's flawed, why so? HOW does it ebb? If it doesn't grab us, why? Are our judgements founded if they are partially-informed? Is it characterisation, plot, theme? Does it lag in the middle, or are its characters thin, or are there plot loopholes? Is the ending a partial redemption, or the final straw? A cake, perhaps (homogenous throughout) can be judged on a single bite, but the linear trajectory and fluctuance of a novel is an entirely different entity.
Perhaps I'm being lofty and academic here - I don't know! I've always been the studious sort, the least hedonistic of my friends, inclined to dull tasks and a covert fan of white bread, early nights and envelope-stuffing. I just know I'm a bitter-end girl, a Team Catton devotee to the last.

Also if the book is bad and not boring, as Eleanor suggests, then there must be some redeeming feature. I love a book so poorly written that it gives me a giggle, or a wonderfully cheesy sex scene. Food for satire at any rate!