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JOURNAL, OF THE FICTIVE LIFE by Howard Nemerov

JOURNAL, OF THE FICTIVE LIFE

By

ISBN: 0226572617
Publisher: Rutgers Univ. Press

Kunstlerroman is a fancy literary term given to any novel in which artistic consciousness is the central concern, as with Joyce's Stephen Hero. However, Rilke's Nalte or some of Valery's prose meditations can be taken as extensions of the concept into the more general area of diary-like aesthetic self-analysis, and it is in such a category that one must place Nemerov's Journal. Unfortunately, that is about as far as one can go with flattering comparisons. Nemerov's reflections are rather randomly conceived notebook jottings, playfully or wanly entered. A mild frustration is the dominant mood (Nemerov the poet wants to write fiction but he is at a creative impasse); the method is associational: long stretches of personal recollections, largely psychologically oriented, mixed with philosophical finger-exercises and so forth. Nemerov is at his best with cogent references to the masters (Dante, Pascal, Shakespeare, Freud, James). His own remarks are usually unexceptional (""Life is very short, a brief instant of light; but every instant of it may contain all eternity""), or epigrammatically cute (""It is not my childhood that I seek, but the childhood of my art. As much as to say, Mommy, where do images come from?""). Of course, Nemerov escapes banality by employing a shrewdly ironic tone throughout and suggesting all sorts of cultivated nuances or personae. But even that eventually palls.