I’ve been trying to figure out how to resurrect this blog
without its becoming totally redundant. I toyed with making it a lit blog, but
there are so many good ones out there already, why even bother competing? I
follow those sites. If they write something nifty and I want to point it out, maybe
I’ll link to it. But come on: Have you seen Maud Newton’s link collection? Why
in god’s name would I want to try to replicate that?
So. Best to make this a more personal site, then. The thing
is, books are pretty much my life now, so Nonsense Verse can’t help but dip
into the lit-bloggy world. How to differentiate between the blogging I’ll do
here versus the blogging I’ll do over here, for instance? And how much should
those two worlds communicate?
I’ll be figuring it out as I go along.
I’m leaning toward making this site about the tiny readerly things
I get super-obsessed with — stuff that you may read about here and just go,
“Huh? Whatever, lady,” but which gets yours truly extra excited. (I did this
before, of course. I’m just going to try to do it more often.)
For example: I’ve been reading Alice Munro’s Progress of Love. Many awestruck things
to say about it. But here’s a micro detail that made me dog-ear one
of the pages: In the title story, bottom of Page 10 in my edition, Munro shifts
strikingly from past tense into the present, and then back:
The shadow was a rope, a noose on the end of a rope that hung down from a beam overhead.
“Mama?” says Marietta, in a fainter voice. “Mama, come down, please.” Her voice is faint because she fears that any yell or cry might jolt her mother into movement, cause her to step off the chair and throw her weight on the rope. But even if Marietta wanted to yell she couldn’t. Nothing but this pitiful thread of a voice is left to her — just as in a dream when a beast or a machine is bearing down on you.
“Go and get your father.”
That was what her mother told her to do, and Marietta obeyed.
Munro could have stayed in the past tense throughout. Yet the choice she made, to bring us suddenly into the world of Marietta’s disturbing present, was perfect. Understated, but oh so shrewd. It’s an easy enough detail to read right over, but when I got to this part, it knocked me out. I had to go back and read it again, and again.
