Tom Clancy and the critical divide - Los Angeles Times
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Tom Clancy and the critical divide

Tom Clancy in 2010. The author died Wednesday at 66.
(David Burnett / Associated Press)
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The death of Tom Clancy on Wednesday at 66 raises the issue once again of whether or not there is a divide between readers and critics. It’s a complicated question, one that has come up recently in regard to the way books do or do not get covered. But Clancy is a different story, since he never aspired to literature.

Rather, his novels — “technobabble thriller[s],†as the Times’ Michael Hiltzik characterized them Wednesday morning — were about commerce from the get-go: bestsellers that were made into movies. I’m not saying there’s anything wrong with that, but from this critic’s perspective there’s nothing particularly interesting about it either, which is one reason I never read his books.

Clancy, it should be said, did OK in the review game. His 2010 novel “Dead or Alive†was described as “sprawling but propulsive†by The Times. Still, I find myself thinking, not for the first time, about what it means when critics and readers seem to have different perspectives, what it says about how we read.

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For me, the purest pleasure of the critic is discovery, bringing a book to a reader’s attention, sharing enthusiasm (or a lack of enthusiasm) as part of a public dialogue. Most other critics, I believe, would agree with this: We review books not to give a thumb’s up or down but to engage with them, with their ideas and their sensibilities, to have a conversation of a kind.

This, of course, is a three-part process, an interplay among critic, reader and book. When it’s working, the criticism functions as a discrete piece of thinking and writing on its own terms, inspired by the experience of reading the work.

That’s why writers such as Clancy are so tough for critics; they don’t give us any real way in. Their books are not interested in dialogue but monologue. We know what’s going to happen before we begin.

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Don’t get me wrong. That can be reassuring, especially in a world as chaotic as this one. It explains the success of any number of novels and films. At the same time, it’s not inherently compelling to write about, which is, I think, the heart of the issue when it comes to Clancy’s career.

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