I think that there are two major types of novels:
- Novel of Situations
- Novel of Ideas
Most novels belong to the first type. They tell a story, depict and narrate events and the reader has to make connections between motives, events and situations to understand the plot. Novel of ideas depicts more abstract concepts: the dilemmas, the psychological and spiritual aspects of characters. Where Dickens and George Eliot etc are great at depicting situations with some hints of psychological studies, the primary purpose of their narratives is to tell a story. In case of the rarer type of novel, authors like Dostoevsky, Thomas Mann and Walker Percy have some ideas and ideals to impart to their readers and they make no secret of this intention. The novelist talks ideas unabashedly, his characters deal in ideas, they are on a quest for spiritual and psychological fulfillment.
I am re-reading The Moviegoer after 17 years and gosh, what a book! Robert Pirsig's Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance is another such story still I would call The Moviegoer 'The Great American Novel of Ideas'. It is a shame that Walker Percy is not very well known on this side of Atlantic. He deserves more recognition. Who are the novelists of ideas in English Literature? John Cowper Powys? I don't know any other. My knowledge of the English novel is very inadequate, in fact I had never read a Dickens novel till six months ago (now I have read three). So where is the British Jack 'Binx' Bolling? Somerset Maugham's Larry does not count because he found an answer in India. I am talking about those who just search, the ones who suffer from the Existentialist angst, they never find an answer. So who is the British seeker unto truth?


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