Wednesday, September 2, 2009

INTO AMERICA: on the not reading of IMPERIAL by WILLIAM T. VOLLMANN


Going into America.

Have you noticed that the reviews of William T. Vollmann's IMPERIAL have appeared and almost to a word they have been the sort of review that praises and then takes away complaining of the length, the demands placed upon the reader and never does the reviewer admit to not having really read the book?

These reviews do not send people to the reading of IMPERIAL. They allow the reader to conclude that they know enough about the book, know that it has something to do with the border of the United States, with the people who live near the border, about the complexity of a once open border, with a now closed border ( though if anyone remembers LONELY ARE THE BRAVE he or she will remember that the reason the Kirk Douglas character breaks into the jail is to try to help his friend who has been arrested for helping illegals--- and this is in 1962!!! so once again the great forgetfulness, the stupidity of journalists today who think they are telling really anything new to those of us who might still have the faculty of memory).

IMPERIAL is still the most important book of the year, the only essential book to be published this year in these United States even now as the reviews have appeared and even after one or two nice profiles of the author, again which lets people off the hook of actually reading IMPERIAL because reading the article allows them to be "well-informed"--- is this the best reason to NEVER read The New York Times? ... who would want to be well-informed if that has to include reading The New York Times?... I hope you have read Marina Tsvetayeva's precise poem "Readers of Newspapers" which includes these lines:

It crawls, the underground snake
crawls, with its load of people.
And each one has his
newspaper, his skin
disease; a twitch of chewing;
newspaper caries.
Masticators of gum,
readers of newspapers.

...

They swallow emptiness,
these readers of newspapers.

...

Grabbers of small moments
readers of newspapers.

...

It's better to go to a graveyard
than into the prurient
sickbay of scab-scratchers,
these readers of newspapers.


If Tsvetayeva was alive today she would have included the glassy eyed viewers of television "news"... if someone tells you he or she watches CNN... it like the famous dot on the forehead of an Indian woman--- according to V. S. Naipaul--- meaning, you know her head is empty.

IMPERIAL is not meant to be read in one sitting, or many sittings... it can not be so read. And that is the flaw of all the reviews I have seen. None of them confess to not having really read the book. They all pretend to having read it and here is now their considered opinion. This failure to be honest, this dishonesty by pretending to having read is something that David Foster Wallace was well aware of when he would be interviewed or meet reviewers of INFINITE JEST and well knowing that the book had not been read... of course this happened with William Gaddis's THE RECOGNITIONS as documented in Jack Green's FIRE THE BASTARD (Dalkey Archive).

IMPERIAL should be open on a person's desk. The other day Vollmann sent me to read John Steinbeck's The Vigilante in THE LONG VALLEY which I found in the Library of America's edtion of Steinbeck... Steinbeck withholds judgment on a man who has participated in a lynching... trusting his readers to... a trust that our genius well reviewed writers no longer can muster. But it is this sending and the resulting further reading that marks out IMPERIAL and no reviewer as far as I know had commented on this essential detail.. beacause to do so would mean that they could not produce the required judgment for those scab-pickers

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

http://htmlgiant.com/?p=14264

Some of the 300-odd kids posting on this obviously read Big, "Difficult" Books like Imperial.

All the way through.

Too bad they aren't book reviewers.

Anthony said...

How do you think IMPERIAL will read for a non-American? Is it equally important beyond the US?

Thank you for the introduction to Vollmann and to Marina Tsvetayeva. I'm working slowly through the shorter version of Rising Up and Rising Down: Some Thoughts on Violence, Freedom and Urgent Means and have a collection of Tsvetayeva's poems on order.

Thomas McGonigle said...

Iain Sinclair tries to do for certain areas of London what Vollmann does. I know Sinclair has been writing for a long time but while his books are interesting they are not extreme enough and flirt with a sort of curious sentimental amateur pose of being an outsider while in fact being the perfectly well-connected insider. Vollmann is diligent to the extreme, a man who trusts no man, who relies on no one. To be read in England he might provide the sort of corrective example to counteract the peculiar English vice of being an amateur having a go at something

hal said...

The quarterlyconversation.com has an excellent review of Imperial by Scott Bryan Wilson.

This is a great book well worth reading.

hal

Scott Abbott said...

I've in fact got "Imperial" open on my desk, and I keep dipping into it, and will for the coming year. It's a remarkable book.

Anonymous said...

Now that I've been reading Imperial for several months and am a third of the way through, I decided to sample the reviews, from the hilariously sarcastic screed in the N.Y. Times to this comment by Thomas McGonigle. I understand his suggestion that we leave the tome, nearly the size of a family Bible, open on the desk. Imperial for me is the latest in what I regard as "bathroom books," to be read a few pages at a time, at sittings that often extend beyond the minimum time required. Given the sewage and foam of the Imperial Valley's New River and the poisonous sink of the Salton Sea, Imperial is the perfect bathroom book. Before that I read Alexander Theroux's 300-page single-paragraph diatribe on The Grammar of Rock, which has nothing to do with grammar and precious little to do with rock, but offers Theroux's scathing assessment of the idiocy of popular song lyrics of the 20th century--completely unreadable in the normal way but brilliantly funny in toilet-sitting lengths. The frequent repetitions of quotes and assessments seem like old friends when they reappear, separated by hundreds of pages and weeks of time--and the same with Vollmann's frequent repetitions, so like song choruses. Before Vollmann and Theroux, my first true bathroom book, the one that made me recognize and name a new category of reading, was the unsung, utterly unique classic, R. Moore's The Universal Assistant and Complete Mechanic, Containing Over One Million Industrial Facts, published in New York in 1882. Opening with a first page offering a "table showing the time in the various parts of the world when it is noon in Washington, D.C.," this encyclopedic work has it all, from detailed instructions for managing a farm, to recipes for every conceivable edible dish or hair tonic, to a long disquisition on the cosmology of Emanuel Swedenborg, all tossed in halter-skelter, cut and pasted by some madman with scissors and a pot of glue. Frequent illustrations give a false sense of progress. At just over a thousand pages, Moore's compendium is to be skimmed, paragraph by paragraph, until, every few pages, some tidbit demands to be read word for word, perhaps a disquisition on how to distill gin, or how to approach the duties of a new first-time husband, or how to build a sawmill. I've not yet identified my next bathroom book, but I have 800 pages more of Imperial to go, so I'm not worried. Bathroom books are highly recommended to those who require a little more time for their duties, or those who just want an excuse for taking frequent short breaks from everyday life. I would never have read any of these three books otherwise, and I'm infinitely better off for the experiences, especially that afforded by Vollman's Imperial.