A Real Place in the World
I was lounging on the deck making my way through a stack of magazines I'd brought from home when I found an inspiring article in The New York Times magazine by Bruce Weber entitled "Richard Ford's Uncommon Characters." Talk about life imitating art right before my eyes: those boys, who'd been embroiled in a struggle for dominance, were so common as to be uncommonly real! In Weber's article Ford remarked, "A lot of people could be novelists if they were willing to devote their lives to their responses to things." Wow! I thought. Simply recording the boys' actions wasn't nearly enough! I had to determine how I would have responded to what they were doing. The idea appealed to me but where did I even begin?
In the piece, Weber stated, "The stories in Rock Springs…are populated by characters who are mostly down and out, natives of a remote region that simply doesn't offer them enough. It's a class of people familiar to readers of current fiction. But unlike those in, say, the early stories of Raymond Carver, whose work set the tone for many of the new writers of the 1980's, Ford's characters rarely yield to despair or defeat. They actively seek the high-minded solace that's available in self-knowledge, in the future, in love.
"The individual's struggle for transcendence is an old literary theme, of course. But in the narrow mainstream of contemporary American fiction, it's absence has been well-noted—and by an increasing number of critics missed—particularly in the spreading influence of the so-called 'minimalists.' According to many literary observers, short-story writers like Carver, Mary Robison, and Amy Hempel, by virtue of their many imitators, have spawned what has become a dominant fashion in American writing.
"The perceived minimalist formula is marked by a technical expertise resonating primarily in the service of characters so burdened by powerlessness, diffidence or anomie that their engagement with the world around them is superficial or oblique. Their often introspective revelations tend to reinforce this sense of isolation…Ford is onto something new…providing American fiction with the theme that life is serious, rather than life is trivial or that life is very grim. That there are issues in this life worth trying to clarify.
"Raymond Carver, who is Ford's close friend, is unequivocal. 'Sentence for sentence,' he says, 'Richard is the best writer at work in this country today [1988].' Ford says, 'I really think that human beings accommodating themselves to a landscape, to a place, is natively dramatic, that that in itself is potentially the stuff of literature.'"
This made me think of the people I'd been meeting in Costa Rica and how dramatic life felt to me just by the sheer fact that the people there were responding to such a fierce environment. Ford went on to say, "The stories didn't exhaust all the things I care about, the things that move me to write…The other books are novels, and in writing them, I exhausted everything which is, in a way, my own private definition of a novel. I try to exhaust my own interest in a place. Then I'll just move on, write about someplace else where I kind of notice again how people accommodate themselves to where they live. That accounts for the kinds of things I write."
The article made me want to read his work so I put Rock Springs at the top of my book-buying list. One of the main reasons I was anxious to see how his writing style unfurled itself on the page was this statement by Weber: "Ford's sentences are raggedly lyrical, an eclectic music equally capable of the elegant, vaulting language that seeks to encompass an ambiguity and the brisk simplicity of vernacular speech…Perhaps the most salient characteristic of the stories in Rock Springs is a climactic explication. In his most trenchant passages, Ford launches an almost essayistic probe of human yearning and the stories resonate finally with the conviction that his characters have a real place in the world, however strained."
Ford tells Weber, "What I write is fiction. What I do is imagine a place and call it a name." Weber asks Ford about his relationship between the place on the map and the place on the page. "Me," he answered. "It's just me. There is a place, and there is an impulse to write, and I am the only important meditative there. Which is not to single out my own importance, just my responsibility."
I sat for a while, staring out at the deepening blue of the water as the day waned, feeling envious of someone who could talk so confidently about writing, the writing life and his responsibility within it. I wanted to rest in that hallowed place so badly I could taste it but the writing I was doing was paltry and stunted. Would that ever change? I wondered.
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