April 18, 2007

A Long, Long Book

Maybe I'm too obsessed with blogging. It's been only five days since I last posted, but I feel like it has been an eternity. For the last couple days, I have been watching in horror as my then-newest post sank lower and lower on the list of blogs, until I simply could not stand it any longer. Plus, I didn't like its title. Time for a new post!

The reason I have not been blogging much recently is that I've been spending most of my free time reading Victor Hugo's Les Miserables. It is a FANTASTIC book! True, it's almost as long as the Bible (in pages), but it is worth it. I have found it to be simultaneously profound, gripping, and stirring.

One thing I've noticed is that Victor Hugo tends to expound more than some readers might think is necessary. In the beginning of the book, there is a fifty page biography of a character who promptly dies once the action actually starts. When another character is known once to have looted some dead soldiers on the battlefield of Waterloo, Hugo deems it necessary to write a sixty-five page dissertation on the strategies of Napoleon and Wellington, the various circumstances that changed the course of the famous battle, and the philosophical and international ramifications of the outcome. Fortunately, I found it intriguing. Finally, when the main character hides from his pursuers in a convent, the description of this action is quickly followed by a thirty-seven page section covering every aspect of this specific convent, from its location and layout to its inhabitants and history, and expounding on the philosophies, appropriateness, severity, ambitions, correctness, and results of monasticism, its followers, and its opponents.

As you can see, I am beginning to acquire Victor Hugo's propensity to use long, complex sentences.

I am currently about 500 pages into the book, and I can hardly believe I still have 750 more to go. I can't understand how anyone can write something that long without losing the reader's interest (at least, without losing it often). Whenever I try to write fiction, my stories end up far short on substance. I'm not sure I'd be able to come up with enough storyline to write a novel. Yet even if I had the plot of Les Mis to start with, I would probably have written it in one hundred pages in a very boring way. Victor Hugo transforms it into a twelve-hundred page tome that is fascinating! That is just unfathomable to me. HOW DOES HE DO IT?

A good quote from the part of the book discussing monasticism:

There is, we are aware, a philosophy that denies the infinite. There is also a philosophy, classed pathologically, which denies the sun; this philosophy is called blindness.

To set up a sense we lack as a source of truth, is a fine piece of blind man's assurance.

And the rarity of it consists in the haughty air of superiority and compassion which is assumed towards the philosophy that sees God, by this philosophy that has to grope its way. It makes one think of a mole exclaiming: "How they excite my pity with their prate about a sun!"

6 comments:

lis said...

ooo! ooo! I like that quote! Great for somebody who's wading through mole-writings these days. :O)

And if you discover how Hugo does it, by all means let me know! :O)

Unknown said...

It sounds good, but I think I would get bored easily, with the long descriptions and biographies and history. I like descriptive books, but not descriptions that go on and on and on. Maybe someday...I used to feel the same way about The Lord of the Rings trilogy, but now they're easier to understand and enjoy. :)

I have the same trouble with writing fiction; I absolutely can't make my stories long enough to be an actual book. It's so annoying! :)

Booker said...

Having just finished Hunchback of Notre Dame, I commiserate about his overly lengthy descriptions. I skim them myself, looking for character names as reference points, but he usually does a good job of describing whatever "it" is singlemindedly :-(

TripleNine said...

Hurrah for Hugo! I've read both Hunchback and Les Mis and loved them both. Well, at least loved the part where he doesn't go on for five chapters about the sewer system of paris.

ljm said...

That is a great book.

Also, the paratrooper/medic bags on your wishlist are cool. Keith wants one now.

Susan Elizabeth said...

So, this book must have enveloped your life...we haven't heard from you in ages!