Franzen, Fame, And The Manacles Of Freedom

Jonathan Franzen would likely have preferred having boiling oil poured down his writing pants to facing the question about giving Oprah a snub. I confess as I watched him finally share the stage with a mighty gracious Oprah this week, I detected a Craig Ferguson-worthy awkward pause all over him. It seemed to me he locked up for a moment -- lost in a quiet fit of fumbled hypocrisy -- as he accounted for his recoil against having The Corrections chosen for Oprah's book club. Oprah was enormously kind. Rather than gloating, she offered him welcome and sincere praise. The lady loves his work, and rightly so. He's a very fine writer. Yet on the show, he made no honest allusion to his opinion -- those years ago -- that his male audience would flee his work if he took a book date with Oprah. Having heard every word of his Oprah interview, I still believe this: He feared the intelligentsia of literary fiction would think less of him if he took Oprah's praise and did the show with The Corrections. So, he snubbed her those years ago, setting off a far bigger media tsunami than he thought possible. Then, this week, he and Freedom rode the wave of there's-no-such-thing-as-bad-publicity straight onto the stage to make up with the Queen of all media. His appearance testifies to the kindness of her. Lesser women would have ignored him, perhaps letting him drown in what has looked like his own hubris.

Since my initial posting on this, some women readers of my novel, She-Rain, have come to some defense of Franzen. They see him as a genuinely self-effacing writer who despises walking in the glow of media, and I agree with them on some levels. Unlike many of his critics, I refuse to indict Franzen as some pompous misanthrope. I believe he's a sincere artist with an interesting process and a noble artistic goal. His gravity-defying praise is often deserved. Yet I stay convinced his novel, Freedom, and its attendant fame amount to a set of chains he wears with some eagerness. Big publishing has used it to drag him under spotlights he outwardly disdains -- even while those lights tan him in shades of gold. He soaks in the money, yet remains openly conflicted about the sun from which it comes.


Publishing is a shrinking herd of followers. Too many editors and critics call a thing brilliant merely because they've heard of the thing's creator, or because they deem it some new gospel on the religion of cool. Thus we end up with books and writers tending to parallel the upward momentum of the likes of Snooki and The Situation. We who read and write are expected to chain ourselves to these figures and go meteoric with them, shouting praise en route to the stars. Franzen is among the industry's stars, no matter how determined he appears not to wear its shine, and Freedom has become too much about a publishing industry anointing. May its literary legacy rise above the noise!

Franzen, for me, would have helped it along had he confessed to Oprah -- right there on television -- his deepest fears, reluctance, hubris, whatever, of those years ago. Instead, I believe he did as he was told by a publishing house in love with celebrity.

Now, wait, this is no veiled criticism of Oprah. I believe she genuinely loves the book, and her graceful way with Franzen speaks of a woman who embodies grace and leadership much too rare. Oprah goes her own way, with courage and a fine will. Franzen, you are extremely fortunate she chose to take you along, letting go of any hard feelings from years back. May your future art find itself worthy of what she’s done for your present and your past. May you come to celebrate, as I do, the new publishing model that will require writers to work as creative entrepreneurs, owners and managers of their own work who gratefully embrace the opportunity, not just the celebrity, that comes with standing in the spotlight. Your work needs no artificial anointing from the trembling hands of publishing. Break those chains, Mr. Franzen, and let your future art out to run. May a kind sincerity run at its side.

And may all of us find books we truly love, shedding the manacles of what the dying publishing industry calls the next -- or current -- great one. Readers, more than ever, you are the curators of great books. Be frank, and honest, about how a book makes you feel, no matter the noise that surrounds it.
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Published on December 07, 2010 23:29
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message 1: by Despina (last edited Dec 10, 2010 04:58AM) (new)

Despina Panagakos Yeargin Hi, Michael, and thank you for an honest post!

Dewey (my husband) and I saw Jonathan Franzen speak at The Decatur Book Festival this year. Didn't know what to expect, but I must admit that his face on the cover of TIME [magazine]and the swooning of many of my friends over his book, The Corrections, had more than fueled my curiosity to see him. After finishing The Corrections, while I had grown to despise most of his characters and pity them at the same time, I was also in awe of a writer who had created such an amazing novel. I had borrowed the book from a friend and bought my own copy after reading it. I can still open just about any page, point to any place on that page, read a bit and marvel at the beautiful writing. I am particularly fond of the first page--he manages to paint SUCH a good picture with such easy language that I'm always moved...almost to tears.

I bought his new book, Freedom, at the end of October. I am AFRAID to begin reading. It's like William Faulkner--you have to invest a lot of time and you don't know how you'll feel or where he'll take you on this emotional portrayal of yet another disfunctional family. Do you feel this way?

Back to the book festival: In walks a rather regular--looking guy, honestly disheveled, and honestly reticent about speaking to so many of us. I really believe that if he didn't HAVE TO, he wouldn't appear at ANY public events, including Oprah's show.

He had nothing prepared, other than a notation of the pages he would read from in the new book. He paused to contemplate almost every sentence that he embarked on, struggling to say exactly and clearly what he felt, which (as he explained that day) is also how he writes and why it takes him so long. When he received questions from the audience, he struggled further to a) seriously contemplate the question and b) to offer an honest and clear answer. Really, his LOOOOOONG--very long pauses--seemed to be honest and difficult and the only thing he could do. I don't think you can fast-forward this guy!

Michael, I fully believe that Franzen is an extreme introvert who is appreciative of the applause and success, but who is equally (if not more so) afraid of the publicity, the public praising and murmuring surrounding his work and his personal life.

I look forward to seeing your review of the book once you've finished it. Perhaps I will begin to read it too...very, very soon.


message 2: by Michael (last edited Dec 10, 2010 12:12PM) (new)

Michael Cogdill Despina that's a truly magnetic window you've opened on Franzen. I find myself re-reading your note, hoping to see more deeply into his heart as a writer and a private/public personality.

Your review of his work's heart-moving beauty inspires me to edit my blog posting above, for that's a facet of his brilliance that I left out. I want to make, sharply, the point that Franzen reluctantly represents the celebrity-obsessed publishing industry. I believe all he truly wants is audience for the writing BECAUSE of the writing. You're a great muse and a wonderful friend!!

Speaking of that, thank you for the friendship you've shown to She-Rain and me. I want your reviews posted across the broadest horizons of the web, not merely because you loved the book but because you write with such splendid and poetical smarts!! Your mind must be shared.

Blessings, my friend. Talk soon!
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