"As my teacher, John C. Gardner did not so much bring me to the word, as he carried me home once again to the flesh of the words that so much of my academic background had year after bloody year destroyed. He returned the eye that the king of trolls had stolen from Woden, my eye that too many literary critics had forced to become blind to listening. John made reading–in place of mere meaning-scavenging–possible once again. The boundless page of schizophrenic resistance. He put me in a position to begin forgetting in order to remember, not with some sort of Garden of Eden innocence, but with voices, echoes, and uncertainty. John blew off the institutional dust that had, because of the desire of the academic industries to explain away beauty, accumulated over William Faulkner’s breathing and returned me to the dizzy breathlessness of Faulkner’s writing. Faulkner’s words, John reminded me, are made from blood, are marked in blood; they are not simply palaces of meaning, convoluted places where dead or dying scholars meet to whisper over the runes in secretive hermeneutic struggles. Read Faulkner’s sentences aloud. Feel them move, not from the page, but from inside the depths of your own body. It was with the recovery of this listening eye that I was finally able to burst into writing. John taught me to hear in physical ways the rhythm of my lips forming words. The touching of two lips, of lips to tongue, each-to-each. The ineluctable modality of the visible. Closed eyes on a beach."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Fantasy authorsAcademics from the United StatesEssayists from the United StatesChildren's authorsEducators from the United States
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Doug Rice, "Remembering John C. Gardner". From the Doug Rice website article (11 September 2016)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/John_Gardner_(American_writer)
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
John Gardner (American writer)
John Champlin Gardner Jr. (July 21, 1933 – September 14, 1982) was an American novelist, essayist, literary critic and university professor. He published ten volumes of criticism, five books for children, two works of poetry, two collections of short stories, and eight novels. He died in a motorcycle accident at age 49.
7 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by John Gardner (American writer) →
Related Quotes
"I remember John’s hands wrapped around his pipe. His scent. I remember descending into the basement of the English De…"
"It's true that, in my books, monsters are always important. People are monsters, people are called monsters by other …"
"Technically our novelists (for instance) are shrewd enough, and publishers and reviewers seem, as never before, eager…"
"True art is by its nature moral. We recognize true art by its careful, thoroughly honest search for and analysis of v…"
"[John Gardner would] take one of my early efforts at a story and go over it with me. I remember him as being very pat…"
"I don't know how Gardner might have been with other students when it came time to have conferences with them about th…"
"In general appearance the is an extremely large and powerful fellow, with a beautiful head and speaking countenance, …"
"Very few of the old s interfere with the duties of their assistants, but there be men who seem to think you have mere…"
"Three days at , and up anchor again; our next place of call being . Every one has heard of the , who tried to beat th…"
"When I was a little boy at school, floundering through Herodotus, and getting double doses of fum-fum daily for my An…"