| Haven't read "Dandelion Wine" for a long time (need to get at it!), and haven't read "Look Homeward, Angel", but the "In Our Time" by Hemingway has a structure that could, I suppose, be called "plotless", although I think the word is kind of harsh.
The idea of "In Our Time" is to show a human life's gradual acceptance of life-as-it-is in a series of vignettes. They are not tied together by plot, really, but by character and theme. I think Hemingway views our lives as being lived that way. It's not really one ordered plot, but a series of vignettes, encounters, or events that form who we are and what we think and feel in a cumulative way.
I loved both (well, all three) of the books. They are not traditionally structured plots, but neither are they isolated short stories. |
| Posts: 2769 | Location: McKinney, Texas | Registered: 11 May 2002 |  
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| I like how you think, Mr. Dark. I have read Look Homeward Angel(one of my favourites), and it feels like being immersed in Eugene's life. No formula plot, just beauty and conflict and sadness. The stuff of life. So in that respect, Dandelion Wine is a blood brother. |
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| Yes Mr. Dark, you've got it right. The Martian Chronicles pulls together a rich blend of philosophical and quasi-religious questing. Spender in particular comes to mind with his rabid idealism and fascination with the Egyptian style philosophies found in the old Martian towns. Old Captain Wilder had some sympathies of course, but he was a soldier first. He did his duty. When it comes right down to it, Bradbury seems to be saying that a common sense duty-bound approach to extremes is the only way to make it through troubled times. The final chapter of the book certainly bears this out as well.
On another note, I finished "In Our Time" this past weekend. Found it unified in a different way than "Dandelion Wine". Bradbury coheres his vignettes of innocence and childhood memories around a core of quiet but expectent reflection. There is always the sense that something exciting is just on the verge of happening around the next bend. The opening chapter is especially rife with this quality. But it abounds throughout the book. Even the lovely piece about the young man who falls in love with the older woman--a tale of love out of sync with the times--pulls the reader inexorably towards a hushed state of expectant quietude. Yet Hemingway drives at our tolerance for violence with a relentless fury that is as unbounded as it is muted. He seems intent upon tearing down the notion that daily life is innocent. This seems to me to be the antithesis of Bradbury's "Dandelion Wine". Hemingway's interchapters deal exclusively with death in all its multi-faceted gory glory. Race hatred is just another form of death that emerges here--the death of love for one's fellow man. None of that comes through in Bradbury's book. But for all their differences, there are also similarities. Hemingway's stark poesy blends realism with fantasy in a subtle manner. You can't help but wonder at the "Soldier's Home" when the recently returned veteran stares vacantly into his mother's eyes and tells her he doesn't love her. There is a surrealism here that is as deep as it is poignant. The brilliant metaphor of the "Three Day Blow", where a storm is compared to Nick's breakup with his girlfriend in "The End of Something" hits with stark and grim poetic reality. And the final chapter, "Big Two Hearted River" makes for delightful reading and stands itself as a strong symbol for the eddies, rapids, swamps, and burnt out patches of forest that inhabit the pages of this fine novel.
Thanks again for reminding me of it, Mr. Dark. I couldn't find Sherwood Anderson's "Winesburg, Ohio" on my shelf though. I know that's due for a read one day soon when I can track it down.
Keep in touch, eh. |
| Posts: 8 | Location: Langley, B.C., Canada | Registered: 22 August 2002 |  
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| Loved your reaction, analysis, and response. Can I quote you?
Hemingway does have a more "negative" world view than Bradbury, but in the end, he believes you can create order, meaning and a quiet happiness. The order manifest in his books and stories attests to the ability of man to create a "clean, well-lighted place" in the midst of chaos, terror and violence.
In "Big, Two-Hearted River" Hemingway shows the devastation of life, but also man's ability to create order and meaning in the midst of the violence. Although not as cheerful as Bradbury (although reading "The Dwarf" "The Skeleton" and some others shows that he has a dark side, also) I find Hemingway to be very hopeful -- given his assumptions about the nature of life.
Enjoy, and, as Electrico says in his postings, "Live Forever"
P.S. Hemingway's "The End of Something" is one of my favorite stories. Short, rich in symbolism from beginning to end, and very realistic. Why are they breaking up? "It isn't fun any more." I love how Hemingway keeps it simple. In "Indian Camp", when the doctor's son asked why the Indian man committed suicide, the father's response is, "He just couldn't stand it any more, I guess." |
| Posts: 2769 | Location: McKinney, Texas | Registered: 11 May 2002 |  
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| Mr. Dark: The respect Mr. Bradbury has for Mr. Hemingway comes through in numerous remarks he has made about his own "favorites." This is evident in "The Parrot Who Loved Papa" and most recently (in One More For the Road) "The F.Scott/Tolstoy/Ahab Accumulator." It seems he wishes to protect the legendary status of EH, in view of his tragic final years.
Stylistically, I thought From the Dust Returned had several examples of Hemingway's importance to RB. He extended details in a manner reminiscent (and possibly "in honor" -do you think??) of Hemingway.
I have many times enjoyed EH's great s.s. collection: Snow of Kilimanjaro. |
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