Books & Critics June 2005 Atlantic Monthly

What makes good writing good

by Christina Schwarz

A Close Read

Article Tools

E-mail Article
Printer Format

"I liked acting, at that age. You got to dwell on feelings, which were all I dwelt on then anyway, and turn them over, play them out. We had long discussions: would a child afraid of her father show the fear in public? would a man who was in love with a woman talk more loudly when she entered the room? Those who'd had real training (I was not one of them) spoke with scorn about actors who 'indicated,' who tried to display a response without actually feeling it. An audience could always tell. What was new to me here was the idea that insincerity was visible. I understood from this that in real life I was not getting away with as much as I thought." —from "My Shape," in Ideas of Heaven, by Joan Silber (Norton)

Like a gymnast off a springboard, Joan Silber begins this, and many other flawlessly pitched paragraphs in her recent story collection, with a punch—a short, simple sentence that establishes a particular. She sticks her landing, too (having traveled some distance in the meantime), with another demonstration of muscle: two final sentences, as arresting in their slow pace and awkward construction as the epiphany they describe. In between this opening and closing Silber's words flow organically.

Ideas of Heaven

by Joan Silber
Norton

It's largely sentence variation and balanced rhythm that make this passage pleasing. Silber twins clauses—"You got to dwell on feelings, which were all I dwelt on"; "turn them over, play them out"; the two questions; "indicated" and its clarification—and these branch like rivulets, adding nuance, while the solid, simple sentences between them lend backbone. There is variety and balance in meaning, as well, in that the paragraph touches on emotion from every angle—experienced, expressed, and observed. Silber's writing is smooth, yes, but it's also liberally spiced. Here, juxtaposing the present and the past, she peppers her lines with gentle mockery as the mature woman looks back at the silly, insubstantial person she once was.

Christina Schwarz is the author of the novels Drowning Ruth and All Is Vanity.

Article Tools

E-mail Article
Printer Format

What do you think? Discuss this article in Post & Riposte.

Subscribe to our e-mail newsletter.

Also By

Christina Schwarz

January/February 2007

New Fiction

October 2006

A Close Read

Breakable You, by Brian Morton.

July/August 2006

A Close Read

Stoner, by John Williams.


Name

Address 1

Address 2

City

State Zip

Email

Atlantic Voices

The End Of "Don't Ask"? Read more

08 July 2008 9:09 P.M.

John McCain Thinks Social Security Is a Disgrace Read more

08 July 2008 9:12 P.M.

Cameronism and Grand New Party Read more

08 July 2008 4:59 P.M.

Drivers or bikers: who sucks more? Read more

08 July 2008 4:08 P.M.

Obama And The Issues Read more

08 July 2008 6:39 P.M.

We are ready #2! Advertisers and visas Read more

08 July 2008 12:34 A.M.

Aspen Without Ideas Read more

08 July 2008 10:11 A.M.

Notes from Aspen 4 Read more

04 July 2008 8:50 P.M.