Why Many Photographers Rarely Read Fiction
Why Many Photographers Rarely Read Fiction
1. I don’t have time.
2. What am I going to get out of it?
3. I am dyslexic, A.D.D. and/or hyperactive.
4. It’s a waste of time. I’d rather watch television.
5. My first priority is to stay on top of the new technology.
6. I am a visually oriented person. I prefer to look at photography books. I get most my best ideas by looking at other people’s pictures.
7. I am practical. I don’t have time for fantasy.
8. I am more interested in the truth.
9. I am looking for role models. If I had the time, I’d read biographies of other photographers.
10. Reading fiction is irrelevant and distractive. I should be placing all my free time into marketing, or…
11. I only read self-help books. I actually read nine of them this year.
Why They Should
1. Unless you are photographing a process or how to do something, you are probably interested in evoking emotions and challenging the eye and mind. Fiction’s aim is to give the reader an emotional and intellectual experience.
2. Fiction invites the photographer to see the world differently and to grow creatively.
For example, here is an observation on the ways portrait photographers may approach their work. The photographer may see the subject through his or her eyes and respond to what they see or he or she may attempt to photograph the subject without interference from himself or herself.
the people I photograph.
Richard Avedon
The best fiction writing reveals to the reader a story of characters and their experiences in such a realistic and convincing way that the reader's consciousness is absorbed into the story. Rather than reading about characters, the reader is standing among them, looking at the world from their eyes, seeing what they see, feeling what they feel, doing what they do.
Reading fiction encourages the reader to see the world differently. What if you were to make a picture seen through the eyes of another person; not the subject or the photographer?
Imagine yourself seated in a bar with Sean Penn. You have been hired by a magazine to photograph Penn in a natural environment. You might photograph Penn and show your reaction to him. You might photograph Penn by asking him to show you something about himself. Or you might photograph Penn through the eyes of the couple that just noticed the two of you from the other side of the bar. And there are many other options. As you let the story unfold you might become one of the other imaginary characters.
3. Fiction promotes dreaming and helps to make dreams real. Great fiction is like the best dreams or worst nightmares. When we are reading we do not think about what it feels like to be kissed; we are kissed.
4. Fiction helps you to lie convincingly. All photographs must be a lie because a photograph is not the event or the subject. At best, fiction is a lie that tells the truth. And this is so with the best photography.
5. Most photographers fancy themselves as storytellers. Reading fiction will show you an infinite way of approaching the art of telling stories. Unlike the novelist, the photographer’s images rarely have a beginning, a middle and an end. They tell enough of the story for the viewer to imagine what came before and what will come later. Reading stories helps you know what makes up a good story. In order to encourage this kind of participation from your viewers, you need to find that anticipatory moment in the story. Find that moment in the next novel that you read.
Some photographers are natural storytellers. In some cases, it is not the message of the story that makes it great, it is the experience of telling it. And for a reader, it is the experience of reading it. If you are not enjoying the telling of your story, then you have reason to be concerned that your viewers will not enjoy looking at it.
6. Fiction allows you to instantly travel through time and place. There is no limit. It often invites travel to what may be another world for you. For example you could experience Manhattan from new perspectives as Pete Hamill introduces you to a character that arrives in NY on a slave ship in the 1600’s and is offered eternal life as long as he never leaves the island in his award-winning novel Forever. Or you could be transported to Ireland in Edward Rutherford’s Princes of Ireland.
How different would the world become if you were alive for the past 500 years? How would you tell that story?
7. Fiction helps readers to relax and to get off-line. When was the last time you curled up with a good book? We generally move too fast to allow ideas to incubate. The best ideas come to us when we relax. Sometimes just the words themselves are like music if we slow down long enough to listen.
8. Reading relieves stress. Fiction helps us get our minds off ourselves. Some therapists recommend reading fiction as a way to overcome anxiety, depression, isolation and the like.
9. Reading fiction stimulates the right side of the brain and helps turn off the inner critic. It allows us to stretch the possibilities.
10. Reading fiction encourages the reader to suspend disbelief. For example, a good fantasy novel, such as the Lord of the Rings, invites us to accept a world with Hobbits, wizards, dragons, talking trees, and the like. In order to enjoy the trilogy, the reader must believe in what he or she is reading. In fiction, characters can do anything the author wishes. Back to Forever, no one is truly immortal, are they?
11. Fiction gives us permission to allow tears to roll down our cheeks. It invites the full gamut of emotions from sad to glad. It can keep you at the edge of your seat. It can terrify. It can build suspense. It can give you ideas for ways to evoke emotions in your own art.
12. Reading is usually a solitary persuit that nourishes your soul. It allows you to be alone with your thoughts and stimulates a sense of self. When you feel fulfilled it is possible to give. Think of your art as a gift to the world.
13. Reading fiction is mental exercise. We all know exercising is good for us.
14. Those of us who grew up with radio drama know that it is a very visual medium. That is because we needed to create visuals in our mind's eye. Fiction makes similar demands. No two readers will see the same thing. It is a form of your unique vision or way of seeing.
Turn off the TV.
Reading fiction is good for you!
This reading list, by its very nature is highly subjective. These are my opinions. I do not expect them to be yours. I am not going to give you book reviews. This list rather represents the best of what I have read in the last twelve months. Get yourself to a book store. Browse! Explore! Discover! For those of you who are about to enjoy the benefits of reading fiction with renewed fervor or even for the first time, I wish you the best on this adventure.
Forever
Pete Hamill
Back Bay Books
The Princes of Ireland
Edward Rutherfurd
Ballantine Books
The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loanna
Umberto Eco
Harcourt
Saturday
Ian McEwan
Doubleday
Atonement
Ian McEwan
Doubleday
The Plot Against America
Philip Roth
Houghton Mifflin
In The Hand of Dante
Nick Tosches
Little Brown and Company
Paradise Alley
Kevin Baker
