Wednesday, April 15, 2015

"Foxy Little Literary Tricks": Sherwood Anderson on Detective Novelists

Last night I spoke in Oakland....I was haunted all night by the newspaperwoman who came to see me at my hotel yesterday and later appeared at my lecture quite drunk.  She is a successful trick writer--detective stories, I think--is clever.  Lately she has had trouble. Her man has left her.

She is sensitive enough to feel dirty about her work. Jesus Christ but the tricksters sure do pay for their foxy little literary tricks, selling out their own imaginations, getting dirty inside.  

....

Down capitalism.  It has so many little subtle ways of selling people out.

--From Ray Lewis White, ed., Sherwood Anderson's Secret Love Letters (1991)

Sherwood Anderson: no fan of tricksters

On this blog we've heard opinions expressed on detective fiction from various notable writers, including John Updike, Sinclair LewisWilliam Faulkner and Vladimir Nabokov. And now Sherwood Anderson (1876-1941) chimes in, not very sympathetically to say the least!

Detective stories, written by "trick writers" at the behest of a spiritually vapid marketplace ("Down capitalism"), constitute a "sell-out" of the imagination that makes one feel dirty inside. Case in point, according to Anderson: the newspaperwoman who appeared drunk at his 1932 Oakland lecture.

Who was this woman?  It was Nancy Barr Mavity (1890-1959), a longtime reporter for the Oakland Tribune.  She was said to be "intrepid, brilliant, whimsical and with a curiosity about and liking for life at all levels. (though evidently she was not brimming with joie de vivre that night she saw Sherwood Anderson--she sounds more like a character from Winesburg, Ohio).

But how good a detective novelist was she?  Find out soon! Or has anyone read any of her mysteries? If so, what did you think?

4 comments:

  1. Presumably Anderson could have applied the same dictum to writers working commercially in any genre. "Winesburg, Ohio" remains one of my favourite American collections of short stories.

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    1. Yes, I imagine so. It sounds as if he thought poorly of all genre fiction, as hopelessly tainted by commercial formulas. I like Winesburg, Ohio too, it was one of the earliest "serious" books I read (over thirty years ago now). But gad! I recall it it as so very depressing!

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    2. Added a link to Michael Dirda's TLS article on Anderson.

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  2. Detective stories, written by "trick writers" at the behest of a spiritually vapid marketplace ("Down capitalism"), constitute a "sell-out" of the imagination that makes one feel dirty inside.

    Ah yes. The kind of intellectual who despises anything that happens to be popular, merely because it is popular. The sort that really despises ordinary people and anything that ordinary people like. Ordinary people should be reading Sherwood Anderson's books. How dare they prefer detective stories!

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