Grumpy Old Bookman
Academia is all very well, but it overlooks the real stories, says Michael Allen
Every summer my local church has a book sale, and this year I bought A Reader’s Guide to the Contemporary English Novel. It was first published in 1963, and the author, Frederick R Karl, was an American professor of English literature.
It so happens that my own first novel was published in 1963, so this was certainly the sort of book I might have read then. In those days, finding any kind of useful information about the technique of writing, let alone the structure and workings of the book trade, was a hard task. That being the case, many a young writer might well have grabbed this tome with both hands, and taken it all very seriously.
My purposes in mentioning it today, however, are: (i) to suggest that reading this book would have been a complete waste of time, then as now – except perhaps as a dreadful warning of how a young and inexperienced writer can get entirely the wrong idea about what the reading public are really looking for; and (ii) to suggest a few alternative sources of information which might be of some practical value to any would-be novelist of today.