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Literary Lamentation
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10678 |
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BOOK WORLD
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1 / 1986 |
2,044 Words |
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Lindsay Thompson Lindsay Thompson, a graduate of St. Andrews Presbyterian
College, Oxford University, and Lewis and Clark College, works
for a law firm in Portland, Oregon. |
THE AMERICAN NOVEL AND THE WAY WE LIVE NOW
John W. Aldridge
New York: Oxford University Press, 1983
166 pp., $16.95
PANIC AMONG THE PHILISTINES
Bryan F. Griffin
St. Louis: Regnery Gateway, 1983
259 pp., $12.95
Writers are supposed to be motivated by alienation, by the urge to instruct, or by some combination of the two. Sometime after World War II they gave up both and undertook the mass production of plotless, formless, vacuous garbage which the votaries of The Media proclaimed as high art. Writers thus made famous, found it easier to be celebrities than to be good writers. So conclude Griffin and Aldridge in their respective examinations of the sorry state of American literature.
I think it was Richard Armour who wrote that the United States had no need or use for the Virgin Islands when they came upon the market, but that there was something about the name which made Congress cast caution to the winds. A similar flight of whimsy must have seized the editors at Regnery, a normally sound publishing house, when Panic Among the Philistines came over the transom.
Panic originally appeared several years ago as a two-part essay in Harper's. In the Harper's essays, an angry, Goetz-like Griffin stalked the Republican Letters and blasted away at the menacing thugs who had turned American
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