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Daily Curmudgeon

New Voices
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 Reel Politik
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S E A R C H L I T S P A C E
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REEL POLITIK

Contrary Commentary
by James Reel

Logolingus Is A Private Pleasure
THESE ARE THE SOUNDS OF A BOOK: A gentle scrape as you remove the volume
from the shelf. A minute creak as you open the cover and bend back the old
binding. A scratch-rustle-plop as you riffle the pages. A remote breaking of
miniature waves as you turn a single page. A sharp thop as you slam the book
against a desktop mosquito.
A book does not speak. Though crammed with words, a book can be no more than
vaguely susurrant. The words find their sounds only in the reader's head.
A "talking book" may be a valuable compromise for people with impaired
vision, but for the rest of us it is a brain-rotting malignancy. It imposes
the imagination of some other reader--often a poor reader--on our own. It
cuts us off from the important clues and contexts of the printed page,
leaving us to drift gently in a stream of poorly distinguished words.
Yet talking books assault readers at every turn. Most bookstores stock them
in shelves near the entrance, so tape-zombies may find them without having
to be distracted by any demanding printed matter. Talking books have
infiltrated video stores. And the 18-branch library system in my city owns
nearly 3,300 book-on-tape titles, fully half of which are in circulation at
any given time. Librarians report that the average talking book circulates
twice as much as the average print book.
What is the appeal? People making long automobile commutes, or taking cross-country trips, feel that they're making better use of what would otherwise
be intellectual down time. But how well do they attend to the tapes while
contending with traffic and gawking at scenery? And what about people who
put on a spoken-word recording at home, then go about their household
routines? Do they really stop scrubbing the toilet long enough to follow Ian
McKellen through one of the serpentine similes in The Odyssey?
I admit that part of my antagonism toward talking books is my own dislike of
being read to. Surely at some point in my slobbery toddlerhood somebody
narrated to me the tale of Goldilocks and the Three Bears. But I don't
remember such a thing. My earliest literary memory is of reading Little
Golden Books myself as a pre-schooler, being traumatized by the way the
jungle animals mocked the Saggy Baggy Elephant, and thereby learning at a
tender age never to put myself at the mercy of my peers. I could weep over
these stories without embarrassment, because I was reading them myself, in
privacy, forming my own understanding of the narrative, hearing the
characters' voices in my head.
I never developed a tolerance for readers who brought less color to a
sentence than I could without opening my mouth. And face it: most people are
poor readers. They go too fast. They adopt a sing-song rhythm. They gloss
over periods and get lost in dependent clauses. Or, most commonly, they
simply drone. Consider the somewhat twangy but otherwise uninflected
delivery of public radio's Dick Estell. Or the monotone of professional news
readers, which is supposed to convey impartiality but really only implies
that anchors never glance at a script before going on air.
People don't seem to care, and I think it's because these people themselves
don't read aloud with any skill. In college, I once took a course in the
oral interpretation of literature. I did so well that the instructor tried
to recruit me as a major. Not because I was a budding Olivier, but because I
instinctively knew how to read with the oral equivalent of a cocked eyebrow,
and my classmates couldn't get beyond spluttering out phonemes.
Poets are no better. In 1996 Rhino Records issued a four-CD set titled In
Their Own Voices: A Century of Recorded Poetry. It gets off to a
promising start, with Walt Whitman offering a measured, confident reading of
America -- exactly the presentation you'd expect from Whitman, unless
you feared he would indulge in 19th-century melodrama. But then comes the
incantatory monotony of William Butler Yeats, the merely dull monotony of
Robert Frost, the nerdy nasalism of Steven Vincent Benet, Ezra Pound
menacingly intoning his own words with no concession to meaning. Things
improve somewhat with the living poets, although they are still too often
subject to affectation or indifference.
The brightest track in the set is Allen Ginsberg riffing his way carelessly
through a bit of his own America. Somehow this reminded me of a book
I once saw in the Charles Dickens House in London; it was one of the texts
from which Dickens did his celebrated public readings, and it was full of
underlinings, cross-outs, and such stage directions as "slap the table!"
Today's readers must by comparison be bland, inoffensive, uninvolving.
Even good readers fail to engage me. I sampled a bit of the New Testament
delivered by the late Alexander Scourby, my favorite narrator of TV
documentaries; he was the bearded fellow who introduced art films on the
Bravo channel in the 1980s. But on the Bible tape, Scourby's voice made
gentle bedtime stories of everything -- parables and scenes of temptation
alike.
Why should I listen to someone else read when my own sub-vocalization is so
much richer? Yours may be, too, even if you speak with the finesse of a fan
belt about to snap. For as you read silently, you absorb not only the
author's words, but the punctuation and layout. Roddy McDowall does a fine
job with Graham Greene's Stamboul Train, except that he loses us in
passages of dialogue involving insufficiently differentiated minor
characters -- passages we could sort out simply by looking at the arrangement
of quotation marks. And there's no way McDowall can smoothly convey the
paragraph breaks that guide us into and out of interior monologues or quick
changes of scene. Without seeing the text, we cannot grasp its full
substance or its nuance.
It's true that some passages insist on being read aloud. Whisper to yourself
the following line from Edgar Allan Poe's The Raven: "And the silken,
sad, uncertain rustling of each purple curtain..." The early succession of
four gently rocking sibilants -- the Ss -- perfectly conveys the very sound Poe
describes. But then intrudes the affricate ch in each,
followed ballistically by the four rapid aspirated stops in purple
curtain. Poe jerks us awake with these little explosions, setting us up
neatly for the mood of the following line: "Thrilled me -- filled me with
fantastic terrors never felt before..."
Yet we've seen that neither poets nor actors can be relied upon to linger
over such sounds to produce their full effect. Perhaps wrapping one's lips
and tongue with sufficient decadence around a word seems too sexual an act,
a sort of logolingus, inappropriate for public display. So we are best off
practicing this ourselves in private moments, alone with a book we love, a
book representing an author with whom we develop understandings that remain
unspoken.

Titles discussed in Reel Politik may be purchased at a discount from The Bookstall.

Reel's Archive
 Reel Politik 1: On The Future Of Reading

Reel Politik 2: How Not To Read A Book

Reel Politik 3: Plagiarists Of Experience

Reel Politik 4: Logolingus: A Private Pleasure

Reel Politik 5: A Community of Dreamers

Reel Politik 6: The Sensuous Bibliophile

Reel Politik 7: A Divine Madness

Reel Politik 8: Show Me The Books!

Reel Politik 9: The Argument

Reel Politik 10: Literacy & Community

Reel Politik 11: Real Writers Need Real Editors

James Reel is
the arts and entertainment editor of The
Arizona Daily Star, a contributor to Fanfare, and
the
author of The Timid Soul's Guide to
Classical Music.

A Not Entirely Disinterested Service of Bancroft
& Associates: Digital Publishers.


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