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Out Stealing Horses
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Out Stealing Horses - General Discussion (October 2014)
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Terry
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rated it 4 stars
Oct 01, 2014 11:35AM
This is the place for no-spoilers discussion of general things around the book. Interviews and links are great things to post here, as are any general observations before you finish Part I (as long as they don't reveal plot points).
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I just finished the book last night. I really liked the writing: the descriptions of the land and surroundings and...everything else too.
Repeated references to the narrator loving Charles Dickens -- the ultimate literary figure for lovers of intricate and interwoven plotting -- makes me wonder whether the author's goal wasn't to create a sort of anti-Dickens novel, with minimal plotting, few characters, and hardly any of it connecting to anything else. All lyrical writing, not much else. For me, this book was like the tiny cucumber sandwiches you get at high tea -- a tasty, fancy bite, but it left me looking for the deli tray for the real meat.
Repeated references to the narrator loving Charles Dickens -- the ultimate literary figure for lovers of intricate and interwoven plotting -- makes me wonder whether the author's goal wasn't to create a sort of anti-Dickens novel, with minimal plotting, few characters, and hardly any of it connecting to anything else. All lyrical writing, not much else. For me, this book was like the tiny cucumber sandwiches you get at high tea -- a tasty, fancy bite, but it left me looking for the deli tray for the real meat.
I read this book three years ago and gave it 3 stars, but failed to write a review, so I had to go read a few reviews to remember what it was about. I doubt I'll find the time to re-read it in order to make a meaningful contribution to the discussion, but I will eagerly read what is posted!
Matthew, do you feel is possible to have minimal plotting, few characters and a focus on lyrical writing that would work for you? In other words, is it the concept or the execution that doesn't work for you?
Usually I am a pretty plot focused person when reading, but I enjoyed this book very much. The plot that did exist was revealed in a way that things were not necessarily explained completely at first, which led to me wanting to keep reading. I really liked the feelings that the writing gave though. I really need to start keeping track of quotes I like when I read!
I have no problem with the concept of "minimal plotting," it is just that the minimal plotting needs to add up to a complete plot. That complete plot could be summarized in a sentence or two, and that would be fine, but here I felt like there needed to either be LESS plot, or else the plot that there was needed to work.(view spoiler)
Matthew wrote: "And regarding the "plottiness" on Lars's re-appearance (p. 49, NOOK), "Lars is Lars even though I saw him last when he was ten years old, and now he's past sixty, and if this had been something in ..."I actually chuckled when I read that line in the book.
I think the need to have plot threads tie up is very subjective. I used to want -- need it more. Now it seems to me that it's more like life when we are left with loose ends. The journey seems to matter more than it did, the destination less. Which is part of the reason I loved this so much. Trond is much further in the road, but it feels like he's coming to some of the same realisations I am as I get a little older. The book feels to me like a gradual realisation, like life revealing itself and a man making peace with it as it does.
You're making me think, Matthew, and especially to notice what I notice. The story, as I see it, is mostly about what happens in Trond's mind as he pulls together bits of his own life and pieces of others' lives. I feel like my determination (parallel to your own, perhaps) to see into how he's doing that is an actual experience, comparable to his, that is occurring in my mind as I read. And now I venture to say that the author intends for the reader to have such an experience. Which means that an important part of showing is not to tell too much. So, for me the novel does earn its resolution -- but a great deal of that resolution has to occur in the reader's mind.
I was trying to put something into words, and you've nailed it, Lacewing. For me, there can be so much more power in this than if it is made explicit. Why is such a difficult question even when applied to our own motives into which we (presumably) have a decent amount of insight.Again, you've helped me bring into clearer focus the author's achievement here, and how he's managed it.
More coolness exchanged!"For me, there can be so much more power in this than if it is made explicit. Why is such a difficult question even when applied to our own motives into which we (presumably) have a decent amount of insight."
Say more please, Terry; I'm officially on receive mode, looking for clues.
I'm not sure how you can say a novel has "earned its resolution" when, in fact, nothing is resolved. The last 50 or so pages just fleshes out superfluous details of facts we already know.
Matthew, I'll try to keep your challenge in mind as I continue my latest reading. At the moment I can't think of a way to begin explicating (for myself as well as for you) without introducing spoilers -- which are not appropriate for this thread. I may later decide my current take is off by 180 degrees, more or less; so be it.
Meanwhile, let me rephrase what I said earlier. Just as Trond insists on making a whole story out of the parts available to him, the reader is left to make a whole story out of the parts the author has presented.
Matthew wrote: " and then you see a guy who might know what happened, Life definitely includes asking, over a leisurely dinner, "Hey, whatever happened to my father after he left us?" ..."Maybe he thought he already knew? Maybe he was afraid to know?I need to go back and find that part again where they talked in Trond's home and reread. You got me thinking now.
You make good points Lacewing. The book is not so much "a story of what happened" as it is a collection of Trond's thoughts and memories of certain things (intertwined with the present). The mind jumps around and is not so straightforward and like you said, he doesn't know all.
"Just as Trond insists on making a whole story out of the parts available to him, the reader is left to make a whole story out of the parts the author has presented."This goes very close to the heart of what I mean when I say it can be more powerful.
I can understand the need for resolution in terms of events. It used to be strong in me too. But now I more often find something 'too tidy' than 'too loose-ended'. Here, for me, the details are the story. The journey is the story. Where he's come to as a person is the story. And if that journey is the story, then for me I want to be on that journey with him. That grabs me and pulls me in more than watching from outside. And working things out for myself, leaving some of them unknown just as my own problems and concerns often are, makes me feel more that this is real, that I've experienced this, merged with it for the duration of the pages, rather than just been an onlooker.
But yes, stuff going into detail about the resolution should be channeled towards the spoilers thread.
Sidebar comment: I found it coincidental that yesterday I came across this passage (in spoiler here) from Nabokov's lectures about the use of "The AND-AND-AND Device" in
Bleak House
(a read I am just winding down):(view spoiler)
A note: please do try to make sure that any discussions around plot points are within other threads. This one is just for more general impressions and discussion.Matthew, could I ask you to put spoiler tags around your comments 9, 10, 14 and 16, for the benefit of new readers coming along later? I'd prefer not to delete those comments as we'd lose the flow of the discussion here, and I don't think I can edit them myself.
If you're not sure how to do it you can see here:
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
I put the spoiler tag up, as requested, although I am concerned with spoiler-creep. My definition of "spoiler" would never include things that happen on page 49 of a book.
From The Village Voice review, which I seem to agree with most. Many of the others say they "won't give away the secret," which I think is reviewer-ese for "I haven't figured out the secret, but I'm a book reviewer, so I can't let you know that in case there really is something I missed."Spoiler tags, although my definition of spoiler doesn't include anything that would be included in a Village Voice book review blurb:
(view spoiler)
http://www.villagevoice.com/2007-07-1...
Thanks for your cooperation, Matthew. Please keep in mind for the future that what you consider not to be a spoiler may spoil the book for somebody else. I know of many people who would feel that something contained within a review could be a spoiler, as could something early in the book. If in doubt, there's always a thread for spoilered discussion, and you can always use the tags.
Matthew wrote: "I put the spoiler tag up, as requested, although I am concerned with spoiler-creep. My definition of "spoiler" would never include things that happen on page 49 of a book."
I would go further and say that in my opinion, there is no such thing as a spoiler when it comes to good books. If a single sentence can diminish the value of a book for me, it's probably not a book I would care about. But, I also recognize that this is my opinion, and for many other people knowing facts about the book ahead of time does diminish their enjoyment. If a thread announces that it's spoiler free, than I make the effort not to impart anything that might cross that line.
And, as Terry said, there's always the spoiler thread in case there's any doubt. I usually just make all my comments there so I don't have to worry about treading on any particularly sensitive toes.
I would go further and say that in my opinion, there is no such thing as a spoiler when it comes to good books. If a single sentence can diminish the value of a book for me, it's probably not a book I would care about. But, I also recognize that this is my opinion, and for many other people knowing facts about the book ahead of time does diminish their enjoyment. If a thread announces that it's spoiler free, than I make the effort not to impart anything that might cross that line.
And, as Terry said, there's always the spoiler thread in case there's any doubt. I usually just make all my comments there so I don't have to worry about treading on any particularly sensitive toes.
The whole point of the novel is the resolution. It happened so slowly throughout the whole novel we were barely aware it was happening.(view spoiler) at least that's how it seems to me.
Books mentioned in this topic
Bleak House (other topics)Lectures on Literature (other topics)




