A work of art works because it is true, not because it is real.
—Yann Martel
I recently went to a reading by my favorite novelist, Yann Martel. His first novel, The Life of Pi, is a modern classic, in my opinion.
I bought The Life of Pi for my last boyfriend. I was really excited for him to read it because, when we first met, I was captivated by his creative, offbeat way of thinking and our mutual fascination with religions, as two people who were brought up by boring atheists. Naturally, I thought he’d enjoy it.
Turns out, he didn’t enjoy it so much. Because he never read it. Turns out he doesn’t read novels. Turns out that he thinks people who read novels are kind of stupid and that it’s a waste of time to read novels when you could be reading things like Guns, Germs and Steel or watching hours and hours of Ted.com.
We once had a rather heated argument wherein I defended novel reading and he said things like “I didn’t say that you are stupid; I just said people who read novels are stupid.” And I got increasingly confused and tongue-tied, as I often did when we argued.
So, seeing Yann Martel speak, a few years later, was one of the most redeeming creative experiences that I’ve ever had. He talked at length about the importance of reading novels. He talked about how people that don’t read are basically depriving themselves of alternate views of the world that would enable the cultivation of legitimate and intelligent opinions. He said, “Literature is not just entertainment. It’s a tool with which we dissect and interpret our culture.”
Then he started talking about The Life of Pi, an odd little fantasy adventure story about an Indian boy named Pi who gets stranded in a lifeboat with a tiger named Richard Parker, lost at sea for 227 days. I won’t ruin the plot for those of you lucky enough not to have read it yet, but in the end, The Life of Pi is a soliloquy on the nature of faith, reality, and the interpretation of events based on perception. It’s also a really great story.
When Yann Martel was asked where he got the inspiration for this book, he said that it was born from a “fatigue with being reasonable.”
He went on to explain that you can interpret life in two ways:
- Reasonably
- With transcendental, magical thinking
Intellectuals, politicians and capitalists generally go for option one. A reasonable outlook on life seems to be the most practical, does it not? But artists have to gravitate toward option two. Because being reasonable is a very good way to eliminate magical thinking. Sometimes, reason is beside the point. It breeds sterility. It crushes creativity. It leads us ultimately nowhere.
So when you read a novel, you’re championing the cause of creativity and imagination.
The Life of Pi is now officially on my list. well, it’s moved up on my list i should say, because having heard recommendations of it before, it was really just a matter of time for someone to highly recommend it.
might i also say that one of the most transcendental, magical books that this entry reminded me of was a book from childhood (even if you first read it when you were 30, it’s a book from childhood): The Little Prince. it is such an enjoyable book; short, but beautiful. So i share that with you in return.
I am actually now reading a book called The Tale of the Rose, which is about the love story between Antoine de Saint Exupery (who wrote The Little Prince) and his wife, Consuelo. It’s magical and I highly recommend it!
[…] to myself and the world that I’m terrible at it. I stopped reading feminist critiques and moved on to novels. I started my own writing and editing business—take that, lack of drive! And I gave up on “not […]