The Guardian’s Zoe Williams on MPs’ reading habits:
On The Da Vinci Code:
Mention of this book is often suffixed by how many copies it has sold, as if sheer weight of numbers obviates all consideration of how rubbish it is. And it’s a bit late to launch into a critique of a work that makes people feel physically sick when they finish it, like a pound of strawberry bonbons, but the question remains – why aren’t they embarrassed? Why aren’t they at least pretending a greater intellectual evolution than this? What are they trying to hide? That they really prefer Enid Blyton?
On Harry Potter:
This isn’t a question of literary snobbery, of failing to understand the joy of an undemanding read. It doesn’t matter how hard you’ve been working; if you can find pleasure and, more importantly, diversion in a book that has been written with deliberate preteen simplicity, a very low level of ambiguity and an emphasis on dog-level clarity (Yes! No! Good! Bad!) then you are not very bright.
I’ll get some stick for agreeing, I’m sure, but The Da Vinci Code was a poorly written novel. The Harry Potter movies have (so far) been light-hearted fun, but a couple of hours slumped on the couch watching an easily-digestible film is a very different notion to wading through several hundred pages of a children’s book. Perhaps this is subconsciously why I haven’t got round to reading them yet, despite several people’s insistence that I should do so immediately.
I left the education system with very little to show – my last formal examinations were taken at the age of 16, and I didn’t even perform to my potential in those. Yet I try to better myself, and have made my way through the various works of eg. Virgil, Joyce, Tolkien, Wilde, Yeats, Orwell… And all the while, those who would represent me – those luminaries of the ivory towers of Oxford and Cambridge – are reading pulp fiction and children’s stories.
it’s part of the “water cooler” syndrome, when your colleuges at work ask you what you think of the latest JK Drowning or Drab Brown – and look at you sideways when you say “who?” – you kinda get pressured into reading them…
…I have read the Da Vinci thing, thought it had some nice concepts (borrowed) but could have been executed much better…
…As for Potter, I refuse to give it shelf space.
…currently reading – “Head-On/Repossessed” – Julian Cope [linky]