I
was reading Anthony Doerr’s novel All the Light We Cannot See (reviewed here
yesterday) and I thought about the decline of fiction readers in the United
States.
Why
wouldn’t more people want to read a book like this?
It
has suspense, history, and science.
It
recounts life in Nazi-occupied France, Nazi Germany and the Nazi-Russia war
front.
It
reads almost like a compelling news story. It’s beautifully written, full of
well-crafted language and haunting images.
The
book has been a bestseller and won all kinds of recognitions, including the
Pulitzer Prize for fiction.
Have
we really dumbed ourselves down to consuming large amounts of all things Kardashian
as we pray to our cell phones?
Well,
maybe.
I
went looking for answers.
In
2013, the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) published a study of American
reading habits for the calendar year 2012. Some 37,000 people were surveyed.
Here were some of the
findings:
· 30 years ago, 56
percent of Americans read fiction. In 2012, it was 47 percent. Fiction reading
rose from 2002 to 2008, but then declined (I suspect the economic downturn /
great recession in 2008 had something to do with that).
· In 2008, the NEA
thought the decline in fiction reading had tapered off
and perhaps even reversed itself; that turned out to be wrong.
· Men tend to read
non-fiction; women tend to read more fiction.
· Print sales fell
in 2012-2013, but non-fiction held steady. Fiction dropped a whopping 11
percent.
· Only 54 percent
of Americans opened any sort of book that year – print or electronic, fiction,
or non-fiction.
· And guess who
reads the most fiction? Younger Americans (and this might have something to do
with required reading in high school and college, so don’t get your hopes up
for the future).
From
other reports:
· And poetry –
poor poetry – took the biggest beating, make fiction reading looking downright
healthy in contrast. In 2002, 12 percent of Americans read poetry. A decade
later, it was down to 6.7 percent.
· In 2013, romance
novels accounted for roughly one fifth of all adult fiction sales, or about
$1.1 billion.
· In 2012, more
than 70 percent of Young Adult books were bought by
adults
– and three-fourths of that number said they were buying the books to read
themselves, not as a gift for a
child.
It’s
something I find hard to understand, the ambivalence about fiction (and
poetry). I read a lot of fiction. I’ve read it since I first learned to read.
In elementary school, the Scholastic Book Club offered a range of paper backs
every month, and I’d fill up on mysteries and fiction. I had great English
teachers in high school, all of whom loved fiction and short stories.
Of
course, I may have considered them great teachers because I loved what they
taught. It could be a chicken-and-egg thing.
Why
would someone keep buying a self-help or how-to book that’s basically recycled
material from the last self-help book?
Why wouldn’t they give a second thought to a novel like All the Light We Cannot See?
I
don’t know. I can’t put myself in that person’s head.
Theories
about the decline in the reading of fiction abound.
Some
argue that the quality of fiction has declined from what it used to be. I don’t
buy that argument, not one bit. There’s incredible stuff being written today,
wonderful novels. I’ve read several this year, cutting across several genres,
from literary to mystery.
Others
say Americans, especially male readers, like practical, useful stuff. I don’t
buy that one, either. If you’ve read one self-help or how-to book, you’ve
pretty much read them all.
Why
would someone keep buying a self-help or how-to book that’s basically recycled
material from the last self-help book?
Why wouldn’t they give a second thought to a novel like All the Light We Cannot See?
I
don’t know. But I do know that not reading fiction, and not reading poetry, shuts
off the influence of others’ imaginations. It deprives us of stories that we need
to deal with life. And it impoverishes the spirit.
Photograph by George Hodan via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
3 comments:
Startling statistics, Glynn. Makes me oh, so sad . . .
My mother has the book "All the Light We Cannot See" so I will be borrowing it from her soon.
Blessings!
Glynn, other members of our Christian Poets & Writers group on Facebook will surely benefit from this article. Thanks. I'll highlight it on the Christian Poets & Writers blog - http://www.christianpoetsandwriters.com.
Glynn, I go through phases of reading--I read a lot of Christian nonfiction having to do with parenting and young women's lives for the ministry I do. Periodically I'll go on a fiction "binge" of current titles from the library. I read the Maisie Dobbs mystery series by Jacqueline Winspear almost without drawing breath. I tend to self-censor, avoiding fiction that's heavily sexual in nature--don't want that stuff rattling around in my head. But I'm quite sure several publishers or book sellers have built wings with my name on them due to the amount I've spent buying their books over the years. I've finally come up on the library wait list for "All the Light..." and I'm really looking forward to it...
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