CULTURE
NOTES ON A VOICE
No 2 Graham Greene
"Tiger,
darling,"
Graham Greene's wife used to say whenever she found a florid metaphor -
and out
it would go. His rival and fellow Catholic, Anthony Burgess, said that
Greene
sought in his writing "a kind of verbal transparency which refuses to
allow language to become a character in its own right", His voice is
the
driest of any great writer, drier than bone.
His sentences are lean,
lucid, free of the "beastly" adverb, as well as of authorial comment
and moral judgment. He is hard to quote, not being epigrammatic like
his friend
and fellow Catholic Evelyn Waugh; nor easy to parody, like their
contemporary
Ernest Hemingway, But it rarely takes more than three of those
sentences to
situate you in Greeneland, a place whose moral temperature would wring
sweat
out of a fridge, He doesn't have a style so much as a humidity.
Greene's prose has the
clarity of a pane of glass, yet it creates an air of menace, almost an
airlessness, which intensifies the drama, His simplicity makes him
appear
modern, and two of his novels, "The End of the Affair" and
"The Quiet American", have been re-made for the screen since 2000,
Now it's the turn of "Brighton Rock" (first filmed in 1947, with
Richard Attenborough), with the tigerish Helen Mirren down to play one
of
Greene's signature waif-like women.
Golden
rule
Get on with it. Character comes through dialogue and action. No
tiresome
philosophy (except about God, generally one of Greene's least
successful
characters). He believes in "the importance of a human activity
truthfully
reported".
Key decisions
Using Catholic themes for "Brighton Rock" (1938) and his tenth (and
best) novel, "The Power
and the Glory"
(1940). They brought a commercial breakthrough and landed him with the
reputation of a Catholic novelist, which resulted in "The Heart of the
Matter" (1948) - his most famous book, but one he grew to loathe. ("I
hated the hero;' he told me in a BBC interview. When I asked which was
his favorite
of his own books, he answered without hesitation: "The Honorary
Consul" - one of eight novels he set in and around South
America.) In an age of diminishing faith, he uses Catholic
parables in a way that lend them a power beyond their biblical origins
- mining
the gospels rather as John Le Carré, his most obvious successor, has
mined the
cold war.
Strong points
Page-turning. Greene doesn't despise the thriller or detective story.
Billing
his novels as "entertainments", he is not afraid of suspenseful
chapter endings, which Virginia Woolf would never have understood. He
allies dramatic
and comic storytelling with the economy of the age of cinema, drawing
on his
experience as a film critic for the Spectator. Whereas the great novels
of the
19th century went on and on, the power of Greene lies in his concision;
he
wrote novels of about 80,000 words, which you can read and digest in a
sitting,
getting back to the unitary power of drama. When he reached his daily
target of
500 words, he would stop - even in mid-sentence. Oh, and he wrote the
screenplay for one of the best English films, "The Third Man".
Favorite trick
Learned from Joseph Conrad, the trick of comparing something abstract
to
something concrete. If we remember any of his phrases it is likely to
be one of
these images: "silence like a thin rain", or a brothel madam's
kindness mislaid like a pair of spectacles.
Role models
At 12, his favorite character was the detective Dixon Brett, his
favorite
authors John Buchan, Marjorie Bowen and H. Rider Haggard. But his
potency is
anticipated most clearly in the stories of Robert Louis Stevenson, his
idol and
distant cousin.
Typical sentence "I believe in the evil of God." - from "The
Honorary
Consul" –
NICHOLAS
SHAKESPEARE
Intel
Life