I'm finally doing it, y'all. I'm reading Moby Dick, by Herman Melville. The whole fucking thing. My copy is a little over 600 pages with some pretty small type.
I'm halfway through it, and I have to say: Not Bad. Well, like, incredible, but as a reading experience, it's got its ups and downs. First off, it's super readable. Short chapters, minus the 40-something-page digression where Ishmael talks about all the different kinds of whales there are. And for 173-year-old writing, pretty accessible. Lots of flourishes of great prose, but not at all dense like a Faulkner or Joyce or Stein sort of experience.
I bring this up, because I'm easily daunted by Long Form Entertainment. They're remounting GATZ here in New York City this fall. This is a famous production from about 15 years ago by the theater company Elevator Repair Service wherein they read (and act out) the entire text of The Great Gatsby. I missed it when it happend before, and I'd like to see it, but holy shit it's almost 9 hours long. Maybe not?
I didn't see Oppenheimer because, well, 3-plus hours? I need that shit assigned to me by a judge before I sit through that.
I used to not be like this. I loved a 900-page Stephen King joint. I would watch the most boring arthouse epics imaginable. I never even thought to check run-times of films. But these days, idk, maybe I'm pickier in my old age. Maybe I'm busier than I was in my 20s and early 30s. But I think there's something else at work. Let's call it "Mandoline Syndrome."
You ever used a mandoline? The kitchen device, not the stringed musical instrument. It's a very sharp horizontal blade on a flat surface. You take your vegetable like a cucumber or potato or whatever and you slide it back and forth and it makes very thin slices of that vegetable. That mandoline.
Well, I used to own a mandoline, and one night I got a little sloppy, a little too comfortable, and let's just say losing half a knuckle hurts like all get out. So much blood, and so much sharp, sharp, sharp pain.
These days, if I watch a cooking show, and someone pulls out a mandoline slicer, my body tenses up. I'm actually triggered by just seeing a mandoline in use. I, of course, got rid of my mandoline and haven't gone back since.
Let's bring all this back to Long Form Entertainment. In 2010, I read Edward Rutherford's epic historical fiction New York. 860 pages. I was undaunted. I like historical epics. Let's do this. And I did, and it was really good. Like not groundbreaking, but those 860 pages cooked. Loved the stories, loved the historical look at my favorite city. I thought, I'm gonna have to read more of this guy. A real modern-day James Michener, this fellow.
And then I got to the end. Which takes place present-day (mid 2000s for when the novel was written), and the main character of that era was just a guy romanticizing New York City. And okay, fine. We NYC-transplants have all done that. Sure. Great.
But he then gets obsessed with Strawberry Fields in Central Park, and with 1 WTC (which was originally pitched as "The Freedom Tower.") and he comes to this final (FINAL!) paragraph. After 860 pages this is what he landed on:

"Imagine. Freedom. Always."
Fuck off.
When I read that, I actually threw the book across the room.
I think this paragraph was my Mandoline accident of reading. I'm so reluctant to read a book longer than 350 pages, watch a movie over 2 hours, or even start a TV-show with more than 2 seasons.
I've read plenty of books with lackluster, even bad, endings. This isn't either. It's an offense. It suggests that Rutherford doesn't trust someone who'll read a 700+ page novel has any critical thinking skills.
"This is why people hate New Yorkers, Edward!" I shouted. And I share this with you only to say two things:
1) If you're a writer, don't do this.
2) Even when we're scared, we can overcome. Imagine. Reading. A Long Book.
Please don't spoil Moby Dick in the comments, btw. I don't know how it ends, though, I've got my fingers crossed that Queequeg and Stubb get married in the end.
-Jeffrey Cranor
Aug 26, 2024
Juliette Birkner
2024-09-13 22:49:58 +0000 UTCdevilsvine
2024-09-01 08:15:57 +0000 UTCCarolyn Kahn
2024-08-27 18:04:13 +0000 UTCPoe Villiers
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2024-08-27 08:38:15 +0000 UTCmguin
2024-08-26 18:35:20 +0000 UTCEric Sowder
2024-08-26 17:33:39 +0000 UTCSebastian C. Ravel
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2024-08-26 14:31:20 +0000 UTCDan Coffey
2024-08-26 14:23:49 +0000 UTCJulia Diem
2024-08-26 14:15:09 +0000 UTCTara Brown
2024-08-26 14:12:30 +0000 UTCDoni Payne
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