Countdown of readers' favorite posts of 2020 continues with the sixth most-popular:
Should books last forever? On writing in a 'cancel culture'
Writers
think a lot about how to write but, surprisingly, not always about why they
write in the first place. The Writer’s League of Texas’ Becka Oliver cornered a disparate trio of writers – Sarah Bird, Varian Johnson, and Joe R.Lansdale, one Black, two white, at the WLT’s
recent virtual “unconference” and bumped into a debate about the life span of
books in today’s “cancel culture.”
Why
write? “That is a hard and complicated question,” Johnson acknowledged. “I
write because I’m trying to work something else (out) in the world.”
“I
would call (writing) a happy compulsion,” Lansdale said. “I write for me. I
write like everybody I know is dead and hope readers like it.”
“It’s
a defense against all the nonbelievers who surround you,” Bird said, noting
that when she first began selling stories she was still reluctant to award
herself the title of “author,” and would have answered the question by saying,
“I write for money.” Later, during harder times, “I wrote to cheer myself up. .
. (and) to memorialize my family.” Later, she termed the writing of her most
recent book, Daughter of a Daughter of a Queen, a fictionalized
narrative of the only woman among the 19th-century’s all-Black Buffalo
Soldiers, “a calling.”
Then,
having reached the point at which she could retire from writing, she found she
no longer could abandon that calling. “I would be mentally ill if I didn’t.”
Nice
word, that, “calling.” “Can you talk about what the calling of writing to
kids,” Oliver asked Johnson, whose primarily for young readers books include The
Great Greene Heist, The Parker League, and more.
Turns
out, writing for kids is more complicated than a reader might think.
“Middle
grade (literature) has to be written for years 8-12ish, while remembering that
adults will read it too. . . The first draft is for only me, before putting the
words out for an audience,” Johnson said.
Image: Pixabay |
And
there it was again. The word in the room. Race.
Lansdale,
whose dark tales are definitely not written for school age audiences, agreed
with Johnson on the need for discretion when writing for the young. But for himself,
“If you’re going to address race in the past, it may be uncomfortable. If I’m
going to write about racism I have to write about the ugly aspects of it.”
So,
how do classic books about those “ugly aspects” – the Huckleberry Finns
and To Kill a Mockingbirds – with their plentiful racial epithets and
violence, stand up in today’s audience? Is it time, the group debated, to
“cancel” books written about race by White writers for primarily White
audiences?
Lansdale
was adamant about defending Mockingbird, which he opened his eyes as a
youngster brought up in deep East Texas. (Some of his own writings, such as the
thriller The Bottoms have been compared to Harper Lee’s story, and his
comic duo Hap and Leonard features Black and white oddball investigators.)
“The
thing about books like To Kill a Mockingbird, which I read as a kid,”
Johnson said, “(is) when people say that defines racism for the South, no, it
(defines) racism for white people.”
But although, as Lansdale noted, “some of those books make white readers see what we don’t see,” Johnson didn't find that sufficient.
"Why," he asked, "should a book be expected to last forever?”
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