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The Death of Reading

 
 
Miller
 
Reply Sun 15 Jul, 2007 09:58 am
Harry Potter and the Death of Reading

By Ron Charles
Sunday, July 15, 2007; B01

It happened on a dark night, somewhere in the middle of Book IV. For three years, I had dutifully read the "Harry Potter" series to my daughter, my voice growing raspy with the effort, page after page. But lately, whole paragraphs of "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire" had started to slip by without my hearing a word. I'd snap back to attention and realize the action had moved from Harry's room to Hagrid's house, and I had no idea what was happening.

And that's when my daughter broke the spell: "Do we have to keep reading this?"

O, the shame of it: a 10-year-old girl and a book critic who had had enough of "Harry Potter." We were both a little sad, but also a little relieved. Although we'd had some good times at Hogwarts, deep down we weren't wild about Harry, and the freedom of finally confessing this secret to each other made us feel like co-conspirators.

Along with changing diapers and supervising geometry homework, reading "Harry Potter" was one of those chores of parenthood that I was happy to do -- and then happy to stop. But all around me, I see adults reading J.K. Rowling's books to themselves: perfectly intelligent, mature people, poring over "Harry Potter" with nary a child in sight. Waterstone's, a British book chain, predicts that the seventh and (supposedly) final volume, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows," may be read by more adults than children. Rowling's U.K. publisher has even been releasing "adult editions." That has an alarmingly illicit sound to it, but don't worry. They're the same books dressed up with more sophisticated dust jackets -- Cap'n Crunch in a Gucci bag.

I'd like to think that this is a romantic return to youth, but it looks like a bad case of cultural infantilism. And when we're not horning in on our kids' favorite books, most of us aren't reading anything at all. More than half the adults in this country won't pick up a novel this year, according to the National Endowment for the Arts. Not one. And the rate of decline has almost tripled in the past decade.

That statistic startles me, even though I hear it again and again. Whenever I confess to people who work for a living that I'm a book critic, I inevitably get the same response: "Imagine being able to sit around all day just reading novels!" Then they turn to each other and shake their heads, amazed that anything so effete should pass for a profession. (I can see it in their eyes: the little tufted pillow, the box of bonbons nearby.) "I don't read fiction," they say, suddenly serious. "I have so little time nowadays that when I read, I like to learn something." But before I can suggest what one might learn from reading a good novel, they pop the question about The Boy Who Lived: "How do you like 'Harry Potter'?"

Of course, it's not really a question anymore, is it? In the current state of Potter mania, it's an invitation to recite the loyalty oath. And you'd better answer correctly. Start carrying on like Moaning Myrtle about the repetitive plots, the static characters, the pedestrian prose, the wit-free tone, the derivative themes, and you'll wish you had your invisibility cloak handy. Besides, from anyone who hasn't sold the 325 million copies that Rowling has, such complaints smack of Bertie Bott's beans, sour-grapes flavor.

Shouldn't we just enjoy the $4 billion party? Millions of adults and children are reading! We keep hearing that "Harry Potter" is the gateway drug that's luring a reluctant populace back into bookstores and libraries. Even teenage boys -- Wii-addicted, MySpace-enslaved boys! -- are reading again, and if that's not magic, what is?

Unfortunately, the evidence doesn't encourage much optimism. Data from the NEA point to a dramatic and accelerating decline in the number of young people reading fiction. Despite their enthusiasm for books in grade school, by high school, most kids are not reading for pleasure at all. My friends who teach English tell me that summaries and critical commentary are now so readily available on the Internet that more and more students are coming to class having read about the books they're studying without having read the books.

And when their parents do pick up a novel, it's often one that leaves a lot to be desired. True, Oprah Winfrey can turn serious works of fiction such as Jeffrey Eugenides's "Middlesex" or Cormac McCarthy's "The Road" into megasellers. But among the top 20 best-selling books on Amazon.com this week, only six are novels -- and that includes the upcoming seventh volume of He Who Must Not Be Outsold, James Patterson's "The Quickie," the 13th volume of Janet Evanovich's comic mystery series and a vampire love saga.

How could the ever-expanding popularity of Harry Potter take place during such an unprecedented decline in the number of Americans reading fiction?

Perhaps submerging the world in an orgy of marketing hysteria doesn't encourage the kind of contemplation, independence and solitude that real engagement with books demands -- and rewards. Consider that, with the release of each new volume, Rowling's readers have been driven not only into greater fits of enthusiasm but into more precise synchronization with one another. Through a marvel of modern publishing, advertising and distribution, millions of people will receive or buy "The Deathly Hallows" on a single day. There's something thrilling about that sort of unity, except that it has almost nothing to do with the unique pleasures of reading a novel: that increasingly rare opportunity to step out of sync with the world, to experience something intimate and private, the sense that you and an author are conspiring for a few hours to experience a place by yourselves -- without a movie version or a set of action figures. Through no fault of Rowling's, Potter mania nonetheless trains children and adults to expect the roar of the coliseum, a mass-media experience that no other novel can possibly provide.

The schools often don't help, either. As I look back on my dozen years of teaching English, I wish I'd spent less time dragging my students through the classics and more time showing them how to strike out on their own and track down new books they might enjoy. Without some sense of where to look and how to look, is it any wonder that most people who want to read fiction glom onto a few bestsellers that everybody's talking about?

In "The Long Tail," Wired editor Chris Anderson suggested that new methods of distribution would shatter the grip of blockbusters. Niche markets would evolve and thrive as never before, creating a long, vital line of products from small producers who never could have profited in the past. It's a cheering notion, but alas, the big head still pretty much overrules the long tail. Like the basilisk that terrorized students at Hogwarts in Book II, "Harry Potter" and a few other much-hyped books devour everyone's attention, leaving most readers paralyzed in praise, apparently incapable of reading much else.

According to a study by Alan Sorensen at Stanford University, "In 1994, over 70 percent of total fiction sales were accounted for by a mere five authors." There's not much reason to think that things have changed. As Albert Greco of the Institute for Publishing Research puts it: "People who read fiction want to read hits written by known authors who are there year after year."

So we're experiencing the literary equivalent of a loss of biodiversity. All those people carrying around an 800-page novel looks like a great thing for American literacy, but it's as ominous as a Forbidden Forest with only one species of tree. Since Harry Potter first Apparated into our lives a decade ago, the number of stand-alone book sections in major metropolitan newspapers has decreased by half -- silencing critical voices that once helped a wide variety of authors around the country get noticed.

The vast majority of adults who tell me they love "Harry Potter" never move on to Susanna Clarke's enchanting "Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell," with its haunting exploration of history and sexual longing, or Philip Pullman's "His Dark Materials," a dazzling fantasy series that explores philosophical themes (including a scathing assault on organized religion) that make Rowling's little world of good vs. evil look, well, childish. And what about the dozens of other brilliant fantasy authors who could take them places that little Harry never dreamed of? Or the wider world of Muggle literary fiction beyond?

According to Amazon, the best-selling book of 2006 was "Cesar's Way: The Natural, Everyday Guide to Understanding and Correcting Common Dog Problems," by Cesar Millan. My favorite was "The Law of Dreams," a first novel by a 56-year-old writer named Peter Behrens. It's the story of an orphaned boy who doesn't know why he survived the evil force that killed his parents -- and left him scarred. Set during the Irish potato famine of 1847, it's not a fantasy, and it's not for children, but there are plenty of monsters here, and Behrens writes in a style that's pure magic. As of this writing, it has sold 8,367 copies in the United States. It's enough to make a book critic snap his broom in two.

Washington Post
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 2,049 • Replies: 33
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boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Sun 15 Jul, 2007 10:30 am
What a sourpuss.

Perhaps it is the rarified air of such snobbish book critics that send so many people to the movies.
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Miller
 
  1  
Reply Sun 15 Jul, 2007 10:36 am
boomerang wrote:
What a sourpuss.

Perhaps it is the rarified air of such snobbish book critics that send so many people to the movies.


Could also be the reason that many, major newspapers are running out of readers...
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boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Sun 15 Jul, 2007 10:40 am
Truth is -- I agree with some of what she says. I'm a big reader of both "important" fiction and "popular" fiction.

I just don't understand critics who sniff at everything popular.
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Noddy24
 
  1  
Reply Sun 15 Jul, 2007 02:19 pm
I didn't get the feeling that the critic was sneering at Harry Potter. I thought he was being wistful that in spite of the Harry Potter hoofra, reading by adults, reading by teens, reading of novels and reading in general are all declining.
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Miller
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jul, 2007 06:54 am
Home delivery of the NYTimes on Sunday is now $6.50/week.
Any wonder, why readership is down?? Rolling Eyes
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Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jul, 2007 07:05 am
Miller wrote:
Home delivery of the NYTimes on Sunday is now $6.50/week.


Compared to other Sunday papers delivered home?
To the street price?
To a weekly/monthly subscription?
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happycat
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jul, 2007 07:06 am
Miller wrote:
Home delivery of the NYTimes on Sunday is now $6.50/week.
Any wonder, why readership is down?? Rolling Eyes


exactly! subscriptiions to newspapers are down everywhere since they're all online anyway.

It's difficult nowadays to find that quiet, down-time to read a book. Books used to be a major form of entertainment to pass the time. Now we just don't have the time!
Although, I remember reading to my kids when they were little and it was so special; I hope new parents don't skip over that stage and start pushing toddlers toward the keyboard instead.
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dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jul, 2007 07:11 am
I tend to re-read, currently I'm re-reading Albert Camus "Lyrical and Critical Essays." next i will re-read Hesse's "Glass bead Game."
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shewolfnm
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jul, 2007 09:07 am
I read about 4 books a month.

Reading is huge for me, and I am passing that on to my daughter.

Reading is where I learn the things I need to know.

Reading FORCES me to find quiet, down time so that I can relax.... I mean, if you dont make the time, you will never finish that good story.

I too re-read.
In fact this past month, I re-read East of Eden and Secret Life of Bees.

Have to be my 2 favorite books. Smile

Oddly enough, they both hit the 'popular' list in the last year as well..
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gustavratzenhofer
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jul, 2007 09:12 am
The Glass Bead Game. I am going to have to dust that one off.
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hamburger
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jul, 2007 10:53 am
i'm with dys , i re-read many of my books . i often find that reading a certain chapter by itself again - rather than the whole book - brings out some real nugget of wisdom or pleasure that i previously overlooked .

our local libraries are doing a rather brisk business and have requested more money from the city (taxpayers Shocked - that's us Laughing ) for book purchases every year .
they also have a good selection of newspapers and magazines - i would say at least a hundred different ones , from bicycling to science to theology - and everything in between .
they now also have a good selection of cd's and dvd's - they also have a fair-sizes collection of lp's stored in the basement , and there a whole batteries of computers set up .

our libraries are really quite busy year-round ; perhaps it has something to do with living in a university town since even the university students make use of the municipal libraries .
we can hardly ever find a parking spot at our in-town library and park about a mile away in a municipal lot - 1st hour free Very Happy .
hbg(too many books in the house !)
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Miller
 
  1  
Reply Mon 16 Jul, 2007 11:03 am
I don't re-read too many of my books, but when it comes to Plays, I save each and every one of them and re-read them over and over again.

I feel somewhat closer to the characters in a play, than I do to characters in a novel or short story.
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Twigs
 
  1  
Reply Fri 20 Jul, 2007 10:23 am
I'm actually re-reading the sixth Harry Potter book right now (well until tonight that is). I feel that even though reading as a whole may be down, incredibly large amounts of children and adults who had never been inspired to read before are reading due to this series. Thats got to count for something.
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Miller
 
  1  
Reply Fri 20 Jul, 2007 10:37 pm
When will Shakespeare get his turn?
0 Replies
 
roger
 
  1  
Reply Fri 20 Jul, 2007 11:12 pm
How about you, Shewolf. I've only read East of Eden once, but like my collection of Kipling, Twain, and Heinline, it sits on the shelf waiting for another go around.
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happycat
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jul, 2007 07:18 am
Twigs wrote:
I'm actually re-reading the sixth Harry Potter book right now (well until tonight that is). I feel that even though reading as a whole may be down, incredibly large amounts of children and adults who had never been inspired to read before are reading due to this series.

Thats got to count for something.


It most certainly counts! I'll bet there are librarians and bespeckled book store clerks just creaming in their pants today to see all the happy kids (and adults) clutching their humungous HP books!! Laughing
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Miller
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jul, 2007 07:28 am
The publisher 's stock just loves to see all that creaming, too.


Drunk
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happycat
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jul, 2007 07:32 am
no doubt.
and I'll bet there was a lot of drinking going on too, now that all the hype and secrecy is over.....and the profits just start rolling in.
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Merry Andrew
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jul, 2007 07:55 am
I don't see the writer of that critique as a "sourpuss" at all, Boomer. He raises some excellent points, not the least of them being the role that blitzkrieg marketing plays in a book's popularity these days. I'm firmly convinced that the main reason most of today's best-sellers become best-sellers is because they are sold to the public with the same type of advertising blitz as a new brand of toothpaste or this year's new Toyota. Three of the absolutely worst writers working today that I can think of are also among the most read and most successful. I refer to Grisham, Tom Clancy and DaVinci Code Brown (forgot his first name even). Their style is so execrable, their plotting so pedestrian that it's a constant wonder to me that they even find a publisher, let alone make billions of dollars on the sale of this trash.

The point is that people read books because other people read them. What would you talk about at a cocktail party if you didn't have the latest best-seller to discuss? You'd be stuck with discussing Dice-K's stance on the pitcher's mound. I know at least a couple of people who make it a point to read all the book reviews in the NYT and the Globe and the New Yorker. That way they don't have to actually read the books; they can still participate in the best-seller discussions.

Yeah, I'm with Dys. Many an evening is far better spent picking up a dusty volume that I've read two or three (or more) times before and finding great pleasure with an old friend, rather than cracking open that latest formula-driven book that people are standing in line to buy because it's the "in" thing to read these days.

On second thought, Boomer, maybe you're right. The book critic is a courpuss. So am I, then.
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