August 19, 2006

Jonathan Franzen, The Discomfort Zone

Jonathan Franzen’s The Discomfort Zone (FSG) is a beautifully written small book, surely a disappointment to those wishing to revisit the expansiveness of The Corrections, but undeniably winning for readers willing to be buoyed along by fluid, never-preening prose and the small insights, sadly often unusable, one gains about one’s past. Its six interlinked essays, two previously published in the New Yorker, are threaded through with references to the author’s mother—strict and emotional in his childhood, graceful and stoic in the slow arc of her dying—and one can’t help but think of The Afterlife, Donald Antrim’s recently published, equally pristine survey of more troubled family relations. Franzen's crosscuts, such as those between family reminiscence and discussion of Peanuts creator Charles Schultz in “Two Ponies,” are effortless, a collage that allows in just enough of the world beyond his family without popping its seams. Even as his boyish awkwardness, usually around girls, turns into fecklessness, usually around women, and the repercussions of his eccentricities pile up, one can’t help but savor Franzen’s mellifluous voice and acknowledge that this is more than mere stopgap before his next novel.

--

More info: Publisher's Weekly review; author page at the Complete Review; a report from a reading in the Columbia Spectator.

UPDATE, 8/21: Lev Grossman turns in a long(ish) profile of Franzen for Time.

UPDATE, 8/30: Michiko Kakutani, reviewing the book in the New York Times, isn't as willing to suspend her dislike of the subject matter as I was.

UPDATE, 8/31: Emily Gordon at Emdashes weighs in on Kakutani's review: "Does Michiko Kakutani have trouble with despair? Specifically, understanding what it might be like to be caught in it? Her self-congratulatory review . . . would seem to suggest that this is so, which would be an unfortunate deficiency in a critic of literature."

UPDATE, 9/5: James Marcus published a review in this weekend's Los Angeles Times Book Review, and links to it (with a brief preface) from his blog, House of Mirth.

UPDATE, 9/6: Today, a ringing endorsement from New York Observer books editor Adam Begley. The lede:

I’m not sure I can tell you the difference between a “personal history” and a memoir, but Jonathan Franzen’s contribution to the genre is so expertly shaped and composed, so genuinely, organically thought-provoking, that I wish I could yank it off the shelf where it will inevitably sit with the autobiographical writing of other hip authors perhaps too young to be writing autobiography (Dave Eggers’ A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, Rick Moody’s The Black Veil, Jonathan Lethem’s The Disappointment Artist, etc.), and toss it into the bleak anonymity of some loosely defined territory like “General Nonfiction.” The only problem is that the six essays in The Discomfort Zone, though they tackle topics as various as Charles Schulz, Franz Kafka and bird watching, are frankly autobiographical. Together they add up to an account, often artfully indirect, of Jonathan Franzen’s protracted coming-of-age—a period that overlaps, in part, with his development as a novelist. Though it never actually mentions either his first two novels or The Corrections (2001), The Discomfort Zone doubles as a map of the route Mr. Franzen traveled to get to the point where he could write his wonderful third novel. So this is, willy-nilly, a writer’s personal history.

UPDATE, 9/9: Here's Theo Schell-Lambert's review in the Village Voice.

UPDATE, 9/29: A review by Marjorie Kehe from the Christian Science Monitor

Posted in Books. Permanent link here.

Home

Recent Entries

> Review of American Earth
> New Artforum.com
> More weekend reading
> Weekend reading
> "Does Time Run Backward in Other Universes?"
> Gura and Dickinson
> Susan Jacoby's Freethinkers
> A little thread concerning the nature of inventiveness
> Visual Interlude: Prayer Book of Claude de France
> Tod Papageorge on contemporary photography
> Calvin Tomkins on Paul Chan in the New Yorker
> Am I the last person to learn this?

Archives

June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
January 2008
December 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
September 2005
August 2005
June 2005
May 2005
April 2005
March 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004
September 2004
August 2004
July 2004
June 2004
May 2004
April 2004
March 2004
February 2004
January 2004
December 2003
November 2003
October 2003
September 2003
August 2003
June 2003
May 2003
April 2003
March 2003
February 2003
December 2002
November 2002

Categories

Architecture & Design
Around the web
Art
Books
Film
From the Archives
Miscellaneous
Music
Papers & Periodicals
Quotes
Radio

Worth Seeing

"Black Is, Black Ain't" at the Renaissance Society, Chicago (through 06/08/08)

"Shaker Design: Out of This World" at the Bard Graduate Center (through 06/15/08)

Elad Lassry at John Connelly Presents (through 06/21/08)

Tomma Abts and Paul Chan at the New Musuem (through 06/29/08)

"Who's Afraid of Jasper Johns?" at Tony Shafrazi Gallery (through 07/12/08)

On My Nightstand

Marilynne Robinson, Home

Patricia Willis, ed., The Complete Prose of Marianne Moore

Links

BrianSholis.com
Today in Letters


Art
art.blogging.la
ArtFagCity
Artforum
ArtCal
Art History Newsletter
Artnet
Artinfo
ArtReview blog
ArtsJournal
Edward Winkleman
e-flux
Élisabeth Lebovici
Frieze
Greg.org
The Guardian
Los Angeles Times
Modern Art Notes
The New York Times
Alec Soth

Books
Anecdotal Evidence
Beatrice
Bookslut
Conversational Reading
Critical Mass
The Guardian
The Literary Saloon
Maud Newton
Moorishgirl
The New York Times
The Page
The Reading Experience
Ready Steady Blog
Three Percent

Journalism/Media
Eat the Press
FishbowlDC
FishbowlNY
Observer media
Romenesko
Slate/Jack Shafer

Papers, Periodicals & Journals
AGNI
The American Scholar
The Atlantic
The Believer
BOMB
Bookforum
The Boston Review
Conjunctions
Gourmet
Granta
The Independent (London)
Le Monde Diplomatique
The LRB
The Los Angeles Times
The Nation
New Left Review
The New Republic
The New Statesman
The New Yorker
The NYRB
The New York Times
The Observer (London)
The Paris Review
A Public Space
The Threepenny Review
The TLS
VegNews
The Virginia Quarterly Review
The Walrus
The Washington Post

Miscellaneous
3 Quarks Daily
About Last Night
Amy's Robot
Arts & Letters Daily
The Bruni Digest
Cliopatria
Caleb Crain
Jenny Davidson
Design Observer
Emdashes
EuroZine
Flavorpill
GridSkipper
Michael Ned Holte
Kultureflash
Low Culture (RIP)
Miss Representation
Momus
openDemocracy
The Pinocchio Theory
The Rest Is Noise
The Revealer
Sign and Sight
Wood S Lot

New York City
Curbed
Eater
Gothamist
New York
New York Brain Terrain
The New York Observer
New York Press
The New York Times
OhMyRockness
Overheard in New York
The Village Voice
Weather

Resources/Archives
International Dada Archive
Lingua Franca mirror
Marx & Engels' Writings
National Philistine
Nothingness.org Library
Situationist International
Archives of American Art
UbuWeb

Syndicate this site (XML)

Some rights reserved. For details, please review my Creative Commons License.

Powered by
Movable Type.

Design cribbed from Miss Representation.