All About Love

Columns: Tag – Serious

  • category image
    Writing Quips and Tips

    Does serious = obscure?

    In a recent interview, I was asked about the “abiding division between ‘literary’ and ‘popular’ novels”. I was asked whether I thought my writing managed to span the division. And whether I considered it interesting to apply these kind of labels at all.

    Perhaps because we’ve faced some pretty serious issues, I think our society has tended to obsess a little more than most about whether a writer happens to be “serious” or not. Obviously, I’m happy if my writing is seen to straddle the great divide. I try to be accessible. That doesn’t mean I don’t try to grapple with interesting issues and themes.

    But why do we find it necessary to enclose fiction into these restrictive boxes? We make excuses for reading genre novels. We feel vaguely ashamed if we’re not seen to be reading something deeply obscure ... 
    • We run face-to-face and correspondence writing courses - see www.allaboutwritingcourses.com for range and dates

    Continue reading. Posted: June 28 2010. Filed under writing, fiction, writing courses, popular, serious, literary
  • category image
    Writing Quips and Tips

    Reading builds empathy

    I fear for a society that doesn’t read.

    Lately I keep coming across people who maintain, with a certain pride, that they never read. Okay there’s some self-interest here. I don’t like to see writing as anachronistic or arcane.

    But we don’t want to become a society unable to concentrate on anything longer than a blog. We don’t want to be an ignorant society.

    Readers learn without realising. Off the top of my head, just this year and entirely through fiction, I’ve learnt about consciousness, about Tudor society and the role of Thomas Cromwell, the gritty underside of Edinburgh, about mathematicians and the behaviour of chimpanzees, about sexual ambiguity and genetics.

    What I fear most is that, when we no longer read, we lose the ability to enter different worlds, to place ourselves in other people’s shoes. Nothing makes us identify with other people quite like accompanying them on a life journey.

    I fear that a society that doesn’t read is a society that lacks empathy. And that we can’t afford to be ...

    • We run face-to-face and correspondence writing courses - see www.allaboutwritingcourses.com for range and dates

    Continue reading. Posted: July 05 2010. Filed under fiction, write, tips, writing courses, read, genre, popular, serious
  • Page 1 of 1 pages