Alain Robbe-Grillet died this past week.
Who the hell is Alain Robbe-Grillet? He was a novelist and a screenwriter and on the very cutting edge back in the 1950s when there was still a discernible edge and everyone could agree the thing was being cut. He was also French, an obviousness of the scarf and the obsession with form in his writing.
Not a lot of people loved his novels. Oprah would hate them. But other writers learned a lot from them. In fact, he was the architect of the so-called nouveau roman, or the new novel, because he was looking to update narrative writing the way painting had been updated in the twentieth century. Reading now, he said, should be about the thing itself instead of about mere description of the outside world. Do away with copying and analyzing, making symbols out of coffee mugs and windows, for chrissake. Stop making metaphors! Put down instead the awarenesses of your characters, make a world, and let the reader experience the words just as he or she experiences life, creating meaning as they go. To that end, he often wrote mysteries, partly I think because the genre suited his instinctual view of art and the human condition (it’s all a fog, find your own way) and partly because mysteries have a natural velocity, which is key when the author has a major something else he’s working on with the book in addition to keeping you reading.
Below, two pages from 1955’s The Voyeur. See what you think.



Money 101: Tara Graham breaks down the current economic crisis, complete with history and analysis for your addled eyes (and pocketbooks).
Brian Frank went to the McCain-Palin rally in Carson and lived to tell about it.
For gay couples, neither candidate in Thursday’s VP debate offered anything remotely resembling change. Tara Graham takes them to task.
Mark Evitt takes a hard look at the recent Village Voice firings and the state of print media in general.
Ryan Barrett takes you through her own person Spin Room on last week’s Vice-Presidential debate.
Tara Graham hits you with the week in gossip. Catch up on the brain candy.
Emily Henry takes a look at the new import HBO sketch-comedy series Little Britain USA
Missed your dose of gossip last week? Tara Graham rounds up all of the juicy tidbits. (Spoiler: Clay Aiken is gay)
Confused by the pro-corn syrup commercials you’ve been seeing lately? You’re not alone. Mark Evitt breaks it down for you.
Chris Nelson weighs in on Obama’s candidacy, the punditry poison, and the speech from Invesco Field.
Max Zimbert interviews some political heavyweights on the Dem’s chances in Ohio and Iowa.
The P+P crew gives a Cribs-style walk-through of their sick DNC digs.
More on the epic Wyclef performance from Chris Nelson, including a sick photo gallery and descriptions of the electric vibe at the event.
Torey Van Oot gets ex-Fugee Wyclef Jean to share his thoughts on courting the Latino vote for Obama.





February 28th, 2008 at 5:23 pm
“Did this mean that he had discovered what the lines were supposed to represent?” A R-G knew that we were incapable of reading the way he wanted us to read. And he couldn’t write that way either. Hell of damned effort, though. Felicitations, monsieur R-G! I salute you. (Even if I will never read you.)
March 12th, 2008 at 11:35 am
Reader Dan says my Oprah comment above (”Oprah would hate his novels”) was ill-advised. He points to Oprah’s website’s treatment of master complex literary stylists such as Bill “to hell with sentence breaks” Faulkner. Dan writes: “[Oprah's] site might have the best guide to faulkner that i’ve yet seen. i’m serious; check it out: (http://www.oprah.com/obc_classic/featbook/asof/obc_featbook_asof_main.jhtml) and there’s mccarthy, morrison, paton, garcia marquez, mistry, dubus, allende, danticat… wiesel, oates …
Thanks Dan for that. Sorry Oprah. Don’t hurt me!
July 13th, 2008 at 9:30 am
May I use your short article and picture of Alain Robbe-Grillet on my pure internet World Literature course. I want to use it as an undate in my intro to the Robbe-Grillet Learning Module.
Thank you,
Nancy D. McDonald