Friday, February 10, 2012

Clan of the Cave Bores (Grrrr!)




 As noted in my introductory piece, "Chapter One," I will write about writing from time to time.  I’ve worked as a journalist and a grant reader and writer, and I’ve written four historical novels, none published.  But in the course of all my reading and writing, I developed ideas about the way fiction, and particularly historical fiction, should work.  What follows here is less a review than a reflection on the nature of the understanding between writer and reader and the ways in which this particular author disappoints.



            Just like, at the least counting, some 45 million other people, I’ve read most of the Jean Auel Earth’s Children, or “Clan of the Cave Bears” series, and in the last week, I finished the final volume, The Land of Painted Caves.  And I’m really mad about it.

            Being mad about a novel is different from not liking it, or being bored by it.  People get mad about a novel when they feel cheated, which means, I think, that the author has violated the unwritten but understood contract with the reader.

            There’s not much mystery as to the terms of that contract.  The reader wants a good story, with characters that they may or may not like, but absolutely believe in.  Ideally, they want a book that’s written in an interesting way and that means something to them in the longer term, giving them something to think about, some insight into their lives (see Edward Mendelson’s  The Things That Matter, a study of the phases of life through examination of seven classic novels).  A historical novel should offer an additional little tasty treat:  the exotica of its setting, and a few fun facts about an era you may have been unfamiliar with.    

            We know what the author wants from the reader, too:  Appreciation.  Love.  Sales!!!  And a chance to tell their story.   Jean Auel earned all those things with her very first novel, but as she let the series drift on, she ceased to deserve them. 

            The first novel introduces Ayla, a little Cro-Magnon girl who loses her family in an earthquake and is subsequently adopted by a clan of Neanderthals;  apparently they did co-exist, and according to recent DNA science, even interbred from time to time.  That’s important because over the course of the novel, Ayla grows up and eventually gives birth to a son.  What drives the novel and creates constant conflict and interest is the difficulty she encounters trying to accommodate herself to a culture in which she is a freak, missing the “instinct” memories possessed by the Neanderthals and endowed, instead, with an ability to think creatively and flexibly.  She’s also tall and blonde and buff from all her hard physical labor, but believes herself to be ugly and stupid compared to the Neanderthals. 

While the writing is never more than workmanlike, it’s a good read.  The characters are engaging, with good people and bad among the Neanderthals, and understanding and depth in their portrayal.  There are generous – very generous – descriptive passages on the terrain, weather patterns, food, drink, medicine, plants, cultural rituals.  You keep reading because it’s interesting and the story’s a good one.  There’s even a cliff-hanger ending when Ayla’s expelled from the clan without the son she adores, and told to find her own way and her own people.  Auel leaves the reader eager to find out what happens next.

Skip about 30 years to the sixth and final book in the series, and you’ll find that while sales are still pretty staggering, reviews are now tepid.   Critics cite things like the exhaustive and exhausting descriptive passages and the repetitive nature of an awful lot of the information;  they seem particularly exercised over the fact that Auel tells us about 15 times how prehistoric people, literally, boil water.  Much of the book is a kind of guided tour of cave paintings as Ayla trains to be a priestess, which some may find interesting (not me!) but which can’t compensate, in a novel, for lack of basic plot and character development.

I’m left wondering what happened.  Did Auel simply run out of inventive steam? After all, over the last four books, her main characters Ayla and her mate, Jondalar, have wandered all the way across the face of Europe (in his case, twice) sampling many different Cro-Magnon cultures along the way;  married and had a kid;  and  invented everything from animal husbandry to surgical sutures.  Maybe the reason the last book is so dull is that there’s really not that much left to say. 

But I’m also wondering if maybe those magnificent sales actually got in her way.  If you’re guaranteed to sell a gazillion books on the strength of your earlier work, you don’t have to try as hard to please your readers with a story that will really grab them.  You can indulge your fascination with your research and drone on about it as long as you like, confident that the audience will buy a ticket to your show regardless of whether you put on a good one.  That’s why I’m mad about this book.  It’s as if Auel just doesn’t care about her readers anymore. 

And if you read the comments about the book on Amazon, you see that there is a bit of a revolt going on – I’m not alone in being bored and mad.  Along with disappointment over non-existent plot and cardboard characters, a common thread is “I’m not going to buy this one – I’ll get it from the library/bargain bin/tag sale, if I decide to read it.”    There was also another theme that really resonated with me:  a lot of people miss the Neanderthals, the characters from her first book.  It’s in that book that she found her most interesting theme and conflicts.  Why did she never come back to them, bringing Ayla full circle, as I fully expected she would?  And how could Auel abandon Ayla’s longed-for and much loved son?  There’s a playwriting dictum called “Chekhov’s gun” which says that if you introduce a gun in the first act, it has to go off by the third.  I think that kid is the equivalent:  you expect him to have a pivotal role at some point, and instead, he’s never seen again.  To be honest, I read the final book primarily to see if Ayla would find out what had become of him.

Why is any of this worth examining, given that no one ever expected the Clan of the Cave Bear series to be one of literature’s undying works?   I think it’s because good storytelling really matters, across all genres and at all literary levels.  There may be a few geniuses who can get away without it, but they’re few and far between, and often what they’re doing crosses some literary borderline, anyway.  But for most of us, writers and readers, story is bedrock, part of that contract between writer and reader I mentioned above.  It’s arrogant for an author to write without taking the reader and their expectations into consideration– even if part of the point is to confound those expectations.   At the end of the day, it takes two to tell a story, one to tell and another to hear;  and if the author stops caring about the person who is listening, then they may as well have remained silent.