Wifetheif
Experienced
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2012
- Posts
- 739
I just finished "A Lit Fuse: the Provocative Life of Harlan Ellison" by Nat Segaloff. Despite the author's protestations, it veers very close to hagiography. One thing that Segaloff mentions in passing is that a fairly large number of Ellison fans and readers adore him in their teens and early adulthood and then as they age lose their interest in him and his fiction almost entirely. I read this book hoping to find a reason for my own disenchantment with Harlan Ellison. Was it just a process of growing older and taking on the responsibilities of job, mortgage, marriage, and raising kids, or is it a realization by his readers that the emperor has no clothes, that his magic tricks now show themselves as smoke, mirrors, and wires? Segaloff doesn't even try to tackle this subject, to the books serious detriment. In finishing the bio I was no closer to understanding why I went from enthralled to ice cold in a few short years. Which brings up a question for this forum. Are there writers you once adored that you now think unremarkable? It could be a famous writer or a writer here at Lit.com. In my case, I think it really was seeing the shortcomings of Ellison's prose. I am still enthralled by other authors I read at the time, so I don't think age and maturity alone explain my disphoria. Have any of you had similar experiences?