Wednesday, August 16, 2017

The Holy Grail of Literature: A Popular & Literary Novel

Every time I read a book that is somewhat related to The Great Gatsby or Fitzgerald, I find something new and important. In this case in the A. Scott Berg biography of Max Perkins, Fitzgerald's editor, I discovered that after Fitzgerald's death they found a letter written to himself.

It read: " I want to write scenes that are frightening and inimitable. I don't want to be as intelligible to my contemporaries as [Hemingway] who, as Gertrude Stein said, is bound for the museums. I am far enough ahead to have some small immortality if I can keep well."

Wow. Perhaps this is why he never explained the novel and he never said it was a failure despite low sales. His book was not understood  by his contemporary audience  and now it appears that a part of him didn't exactly want it to be or at least knew it wouldn't be. It seems that he was trying to write about the meaning and direction of our culture even though we could not realize it at the time. In that way the book would become a classic. His desire for commercial success and longevity were in conflict. From that conflict came a novel that is known to ride the edge between popular and literary fiction.

This one little letter to himself says so much.


No comments:

Post a Comment