On Moral Fiction

John Gardner
3.82
830 ratings 103 reviews
On Moral Fiction set off a firestorm of controversy when it was first published in 1978. With a daring not obscured by the author’s extraordinary humaneness of spirit, the book argued that contemporary literature suffers first and foremost from a basic failure of the test of “morality.” By “moral fiction” the author meant fiction that attempts to test human values, not for the purpose of preaching or peddling a particular ideology or mode of conduct, but in a honest and open-minded effort to find out what best promotes human fulfillment. Such writing does so, as great artists beginning with Homer have always known, by the kind of analysis of characters and actions that brings both the writer and the reader to a fuller understanding, sympathy, and vision of human possibility. Because so much contemporary fiction fails to be moral in this sense, John Gardner argued, it undermines our experience of literature and our faith in ourselves. This bold argument is driven forward as the author subjects the work of his most celebrated contemporaries, such as Saul Bellow, Norman Mailer, John Updike, and Donald Barthelme to his sharp-eyed and relentless analysis. Although the last three decades have seen the rise of new generations of writers, and the ascendancy of postmodern modes of composition, On Moral Fiction still sets out the terms of a more ancient sense of the novelist’s calling. It is a salutary counterweight to prevailing trends. Praise for On Moral Fiction: “On Moral Fiction is criticism with both eyes open, fearless, illuminating, proving that the concern of thecritic is with art, that true art is moral and not trivial, that it and the discussion of it can give pleasure—of a sort that lasts and re-echoes.”— Robert Kirsch, Los Angeles Times “Because Gardner’s anger is honest and wholesome, the criticism of his contemporaries never descends to mere vindictiveness or gossip.”—Max Apple, The Nation “A thoughtful, amusing and arrogant little book, designed to pick fights."—Webster Schott, The Washington Post Book World
Genres: WritingNonfictionPhilosophyLiterary CriticismCriticismReferenceArtAmericanTheoryLiterature
235 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
247 (30%)
4 star
302 (36%)
3 star
189 (23%)
2 star
72 (9%)
1 star
20 (2%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by John Gardner

Lists with this book

1984
The Metamorphosis
Animal Farm
Books Daria Read
70 books • 64 voters
On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft
The Elements of Style
Bird by Bird
Best Books on Writing
791 books • 1323 voters
The Grammar Whisperer: Speaking the Language of Proper English (Without Boring You to Death)
On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft
Writing Fiction
Creative Writing Resource List
26 books • 6 voters
Animal Farm
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
Sense and Sensibility
RagzReads 2022
87 books • 3 voters