William Gaddis wondered, in a
letter to a friend, collected in a book published by Dalkey Archive Press, who
would want to review books for a living. He coined the term ‘book calumnist,’
which I chuckled at while stuck in my temporary hell. Reviewers didn’t seem to
read his books with any patience or diligence. A number of authors—actually,
many authors, and, indeed, any creators of any art, whether it’s music, TV,
film, novels, painting—do not particularly care for a reviewer’s opinion. The
reviewer may help the sales of his or her art. Maybe. Early in Gaddis’ The Recognitions a reviewer comes by
Wyatt Gwyon’s place to ask for something in return for a favorable review in a
reputable magazine. Vladimir Nabokov felt indifferently towards the great majority
of reviewers, with the exception of his friend Edmund Wilson-until Wilson
slammed V.N.’s translation of Pushkin’s Eugene
Onegin; however, Nabokov sent pastries to those who wrote adeptly and
perceptively about his books. When asked about the perceived difficulty of his
books in an interview, V.N. responded by stating “Art is hard.” Nabokov spent
many hours, days, weeks, months, and years, laboring with his art; so why
should the reader be spared?
Gaddis’ question to his
friend about why one would pursue the career of book calumny seemed a fine
question to answer. I’ve written more reviews for episodes of TV in the last
4-5 years than novels (none), short stories (a dozen or so), songs (three), and
screenplays (a good deal, actually). Why? One might wonder. Why spend the time
writing 800-1500 words for individual episodes of television? Perhaps there’s
an old saying along the lines of “If you can’t do, review.” The Internet’s
utility allows anyone to write reviews about anything. The Internet’s deluged
by reviews. People review everything and anything. TV reviewing/recapping
exploded in the last few years. 2-3 years ago a website spoke to various
critics about writing weekly reviews for TV episodes, after David Simon
rejected that approach to criticism. Those folk receive payment for those
reviews, but many do it for free. I did it for free. I still do it for free.
What about those who scoff at anyone writing without pay? Scoff at me, then. If
I only wrote for pay, I would never write. Gaddis, if he still lived, may have
stared at me slack-jawed upon learning I review for free and that I reviewed a
lot. If I used the hours of reviewing TV for writing a novel, I would’ve
completed two novels or several collections of short stories. William Gass
thinks of essays and reviews as a “working novelist insufficiently off-duty.”
I never pursued TV criticism
as my career, but I never tried to become a freelancer for a site either. The
thought crossed my mind, of course. I wanted to write for television. I wanted
to write movie screenplays for a living from the age of 11 or 12. I wanted to
create a TV show at age 16. I bought screenwriting books. I studied
screenplays. I listened (and still listen) to TV commentaries and learned from
Joss Whedon (and his staff of terrific writers), from Damon Lindelof and
Carlton Cuse, and from Kevin Williamson. I wrote my own screenplays. I still
listen to screenwriting podcasts, including Ben Blacker’s Nerdist Writers
Panel, which exposed me to even more writers whose work I hadn’t seen and then
did or whose work I revered and then revered more after listening, and Children
of Tendu with Javi Molina and Jorge Grillo Marxauch. I listened to every
episode-about comics, animation, comedy, drama, web series-so I’d absorb more
and know more. I subscribed to the Creative Screenwriting magazine. The pursuit
of the dream in Los Angeles seemed daunting and hard. Well, it is daunting and
hard, which is why I bought the books and listened to the podcasts. I had
stopped writing lengthy screenplays. It coincided with the creation of the
Nerdist Writers Panel and Jeff Goldsmith’s former Creative Screenwriting
podcast (which had one of the greatest writing interviews I’ve heard with
Michael Arndt). I wrote shorter ones with a limited scope for the purpose of
producing the scripts with friends. I wanted to do something close to the
business that might’ve led to a set visit or interviews with writers. So, I
listened, I read, and I reviewed.
Writers who have made a
living from writing for the Internet like to say, “If you’re good, someone will
find you.” Some people found me. Anyone I wanted to find me still hasn’t.
Reviewing episodes of LOST became my thing during college. I created a blog for
my college paper devoted to my reviews of LOST. I wrote a good deal during
college. I studied literature. I wrote for the paper. I wrote multiple academic
papers every week. Upon graduating I didn’t want to become rusty. I created the
TV With The Foot, and reviewed the final season of LOST. I reviewed more shows
during the fall of 2010, and then more and more and more. During the fall of
2012 I handwrote reviews during the day. I posted reviews the same night the
episode aired in hopes I’d make the front page of Google search, and in hopes
more people would click the link after reading Hitfix’s recap or The AV Club
review, or see it on Twitter, or that my Facebook friends wanted to know what I
thought of a late January episode of The Secret Circle. But that deluge I
mentioned earlier? The deluge of reviews exists. It’s overwhelming. One posts a
review of an episode followed by a link on Twitter and it disappears. Where’d
it go? Not to the front page of Google search and not to top tweets. Reviews
and recaps everywhere. Shawn Ryan re-tweeted a Terriers review I wrote in 2010.
That’s the lone highlight. Game of Thrones fans will accidentally find my blog
somehow and read it. The occasional TVD review might attract a few more people.
Why, though? Why continue to
write the reviews? Habit, one might answer. Habits become routines. Reviewing
became routine. I intended to write fiction in addition to writing reviews.
Fiction’s infinitely harder than reviewing and commentary. I didn’t write
fiction. I felt creatively empty for a long time after my dad died. I read a lot,
I watched a lot of TV, and I wrote about what I watched. I didn’t write what I
thought mattered. Jeff Marek said that he lost himself in hockey after his mom
died as a way to get through the year. Maybe that’s part of why I reviewed so
much-to get me through the first year or two without my dad. So, that’s one
thing I’d tell Gaddis if he hadn’t died in 1998. Also, that line “If you can’t
do, review,” which I might’ve invented, I felt applied to me. I felt I couldn’t
do it, so I didn’t do it. The blank white page of the word processor looked
foreboding, though I had done it. Writing reviews kept my writing chops
polished. I still wrote even if it wasn’t anything I thought was worth a damn.
I felt full of doubt. The habit of writing and posting reviews had drawbacks,
one of which was the absurd sense that anything I wrote needed to be public. My
commitment to maintaining my writing habit created a new habit of writing every
day and posting it regardless of the quality. I read daily newspapers and felt
startled to see the similarities between my writing and those on the beat. Lazy
and clichéd prose. I felt even less capable of writing fiction, of writing
anything well again. The amount of reviewing sort of hollowed me out. Yes, Mr.
Gaddis, I understand what you mean: why would anyone want to consume and
critique day after day after day after bloody day?
I, briefly, emerged from my
reductive cocoon in early 2013. I handwrote the story of Schwoe in a tiny legal
pad. I worked at it for several weeks. A lady inspired a very short story after
a failed rendezvous at a rodeo bar near the Valley Forge casino. The cocoon
hardened after that brief creative spark. I stopped writing about shows I
disliked. Later, I stopped writing what I didn’t enjoy writing anymore, namely
my weekly NFL picks post, in which I mixed personal stuff with football stuff.
I trimmed the list shows I reviewed. I again felt the soft glow of creative
inspiration. At work I wrote down ideas. I outlined two nonsense movies. I
began writing a new short story this past June during a particularly dreadful,
dreary, and dismal day. I handwrote and finished the very short, not even 1700
word, story two days later. I wrote another over a period of nine days. Oh
yeah. I felt closer to writing more fulfilling prose.
I continue to write episode
reviews because I enjoy it (thoughts, really; reviewing’s such a nasty word).
Maybe I learned a little about writing balance. My favorite writers wrote
essays, reviews, or undertook exhausting scholarship, in between novels and
short stories. There’s a reason for that, right? It’s not coincidence. No, one
might benefit from alternating between forms. Of course, besides that, the
writers received immediate money for non-fiction pieces whereas the fiction,
you know, might never pay out. (Gaddis, in one year, made $5 in residuals; Gass
revealed, before someone published Middle
C, that publishers only lose money publishing his fiction). Reviewing
cannot be the only thing. It can be one of many things a writer does. If it is,
though, it will devour you. Okay, I don’t know about you, but it devoured me.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.