Way back when, nearly 3 years ago, one of my first (perhaps even the very first) poll I did as FSP was to find out the favorite academic novels of my readers, who at that time numbered few.
Despite the low voter turn-out, the majority vote-getter was also my personal favorite, Straight Man. I was thinking about Straight Man the other day as I walked across campus with a colleague and I used the phrase "a goose a day", a literary allusion instantly recognizable by other SM fans such as my colleague.
Although not on my original list, another favorite of mine is White Noise (DeLillo), which is only partly an academic novel. I suppose this means I tend toward the absurdist sub-genre of academic novels.
I found this old (2000) list online when searching with the keywords "academic novels". There are 42 novels in the main part of the list. Another long list is here, and it's interesting to examine the differences in the lists (e.g. one contains Bellow, one does not). A recent but shorter list is here, but this includes some novels that I personally would not classify as academic novels.
In my professor-centric world, an academic novel is about faculty ± administrators and not "a chronicle of college sports, fraternities, drinking, coeds, and sex" (I am Charlotte Simmons, T Wolfe; a novel I read and kind of loathed). Those types of novels need another name, e.g. collegiate novel, or something like that.
I was thinking about the general topic of academic novels because I was looking for some books to read and was looking through the lists in the links above. And then I wondered: Why do I want to read an academic novel during the summer? Why do I want to read an academic novel at all? What is it that I like about (some of) them?
I don't know why I like (certain) academic novels so much. In general, my reading preferences tend toward international literary fiction, so in most other respects I am not inclined to 'read about myself' in my leisure reading. There is something very satisfying, however, about reading a really good parody of a faculty meeting or faculty-administrator interactions, even in the summer.
Instead of a poll today, I have a general question related to academic novels:
If you are an academic, do you like this genre of novel or is academia the last thing you want to read about in your leisure reading? Can academic readers be classified according to whether they love a scary-funny parody of a faculty meeting or whether reading about faculty meetings (however fictionalized) is a kind of torture?
A good academic book is a pleasure, but of those listed, I only remember liking Moo, White Noise, and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? The rest came across as silly or pretentious.
ReplyDeleteReal life is more amusing than most books.
I'm so glad to hear someone else loathed I am Charlotte Simmons. A friend recommended it to me and I felt like I was obliged to finish it, even though I found it excruciating. Ugh.
ReplyDeleteI do like the genre of academic fiction you are talking about. Moo and Straight Man both rocked. Isn't summer the perfect time to laugh at all the petty annoyances of the academic year? I'll be mining the lists you linked to for more...
Oh: big thumbs up to Possession too.
ReplyDeleteMaybe this is too close to home, but this seems like a superset, or maybe just an overlapping category, with "Lab lit", some of which is quite fun.
ReplyDeleteI'm only a grad student, so reading about the petty infighting and drama of professors has a rather different character, some odd mixture of "look at all those crazy people" and "what am I getting myself into?"
Hello, I work in academia (I am an associate professor in France) and I enjoy academic novels a lot. I am especially found of Allison Lurie and David Lodge's novels.
ReplyDeleteI enjoy academic novels because they feel relevant to my own life. I particularly like novels about academics (especially female academics) doing research: The Rosetti letter, and more recently, The Devlin Diary, by Christi Phillips; Easter Island by Jennifer Vanderbes; and the previously mentioned Possession by A.S. Byatt (other Byatt novels are good too). I get irritated when a novel includes a character that is an academic but the author clearly has no idea how academia works (e.g. Off the Menu by Christine Son, where a Ph.D. student is always writing her "paper" and then is given a faculty job without a job search).
ReplyDeleteI thought Tom Sharpes book "Wilt" (ISBN-10: 0330253603) was a riot, and certainly a good view of the period in the UK where all the polythecs were changed to Universities by decree. Very funny, with a scary feel, because my University at the time was gobbling up a Polytech campus and associated Departments, and some of the scenes described in the book came to mind. Also found that Richard Mitchells book, the Graves of Academe, insightful and provocative - was important for my career.
ReplyDeleteI like them very much, indeed. David Lodge, Robertson Davies, and in particular, Alison Lurie. Ditto for IACS but I don't think we were the target audience.
ReplyDeleteYes, real life is more amusing, but there were times I guffawed out loud nonetheless, even for the older novels.
I have read, and enjoyed, some of the British ones. I suspect it is to some degree more because I'm a child of a 60s academic than because I'm an academic myself in the noughties!
ReplyDeleteI can't really read much Tom Sharpe, though - my father was an academic on a modern campus university, at a time when the boundaries between sciences and arts were more blurred - not surprisingly most of the writers are in the arts/humanities, and it seems the worlds are more distinct now.
I randomly picked up and read Moo back when I was in high school, but had no idea there was a literary genre of such novels! :) I'll have to check out a couple of the highest rated. Should be more interesting now that I'm a grad student.
ReplyDelete"The Measure of All Things" by Ken Alder.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.amazon.com/Measure-All-Things-Seven-Year-Transformed/dp/074321675X
2 guys go out to measure the world for the meter. The french revolution happens, one guy cooks his data (or rather modern science would consider it that), and hilarity ensues when no one wants to adopt the meter (metric time, anyone?).
Ironically, Gauss used their data to come up with standard deviation.
It's a fantastic tale that everyone should know, scientists and laypeople alike.
I am surprised you don't mention here Alison Lurie (Foreign Affair, I think is her most famous book) who writes academic novels "à la" David Lodge (a writer I like a lot).
ReplyDeleteI didn't know Straight man, so thanks for the tip.
found MOO at the salvation army for 2dollars last week and picked it up with plans to read it this summer. Will add Straight Man as well.
ReplyDeleteI enjoy academic books as long as they don't gush with pretentiosity (not a real word, but sounds fitting).
I think your sample is highly biased because you are polling readers of an academic blog. Obviously we like reading about faculty meetings et al. or we wouldn't be here! That said, I don't think I've read more than one academic novel (The Small Room), but now I'll have to go check out the lists.
ReplyDeleteIntuition, by Allegra Goodman is set in a academic research lab. I really enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteI think people do like to read about themselves (or people and situations they know well).
ReplyDeleteFor people in my science field, the novels by Carl Hiaasen often contain characters and situations we know well (biologists, wildlife officers, environmentalists, eco-terrorists, developers, crooked politicians, The Everglades). These are not intellectually stimulating books, but great fun.
Most of my colleagues love to read about Hiaasen's characters and events. In fact, a science society I belong to invited Hiaasen to be keynote speaker at our last conference. He was hilarious.
It was especially interesting to see the reaction of one of the scientists in the audience who is the basis of a character in one of his novels--a "bio-stitute" (who purportedly sold out to a special interest group).
Fiction meets Reality.
I think I'm with John V on this one. I also like those three.
ReplyDeleteHaven't read Straight Man, I guess I should.
Could not get through Intuition (don't know if it's on the list- it's about researchers who work in a lab, some intrigue about possibly faked data).
Much too much like real life, it was actually stressful to read, so I had to stop. Maybe someday I will try to pick it up again.
p.s. almost all of these novels were written by men.
ReplyDeleteMaybe you should write one!
I like them if they are comedies because it makes the real life version of academia seem a little less screwed up, and hence they make me feel better about my present situation.
ReplyDeleteI loved Possession, too. Hmm, surprised to see that Zadie Smith's On Beauty was omitted...
ReplyDeleteThe vast majority of these novels seems to be about (and probably written by) humanities professors. What about recommendations for fiction about academic scientists (although I supposed one might include The Double Helix in this category ;))? There's Allegra Goodman's Intuition, but that centers on postdoctoral rather than professorial life.
Thanks for the summer reading suggestion. I just went over to Amazon.com and read the first three pages of Straight Man and couldn't stop laughing. I have got to get it!
ReplyDeleteMoo. This is not even a novel, this is career advice.
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moo_(novel)
I won't turn down a novel because it is academic in setting, but I would not seek it out for that reason either. Of course, my fiction reading is mostly fantasy and science fiction. Nalo Hopkinson, Nnedi Okorafor, Steven Barnes, Neil Gaiman,
ReplyDeleteI did read Dan Brown's big bestseller...does it count as an academic novel?
I really loved "Intuition" by Allegra Goodman. Not deep, but a great yarn about life in a lab.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed Intuition by Allegra Goodman. No faculty meetings that I can remember, but there is a romance between postdocs.
ReplyDeleteAnother one I like a lot (but on none of the lists):
ReplyDeleteIntuition by Allegra Goodman
I enjoy satiric academic novels, like Straight Man and A Tenured Professor.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely the last thing I want to do. Moo was recommended to years ago but I still have not read it. I just can't get that excited about it...
ReplyDeletebut maybe I am missing something, eh? My former advisor swears it's about my alma mater.
intuition, by Allegra Goodman. Set in a research lab, focuses on experiments & ethics more than academics. But I liked it.
ReplyDeleteIn general I prefer not to read academic novels though....
Just visiting from Chad Orzel's blog. I rarely read academic novels, but can recommend the satire "The Lecturer's Tale" by James Hynes, about an English lecturer who acquires the ability to make people do whatever he wants by touching them. I guess if I were an academic, I'd say I don't read this genre much, but you could add me to the "scary funny parody" group.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Principal Investigator, Zadie Smith's "On Beauty" should be on the list. Awfully good.
ReplyDeleteLess fictional, but a fascinating read--Of Moths and Men: The Untold Story of Science and the Peppered Moth, Judith Hooper. Read before you teach intro genetics again!
ReplyDeleteI like non-fiction reading more then novels these days, but will check some of the books from your list. Thanks for some reading suggestions for summer. If you like real life fiction, I will recommend "A life decoded" by J. Craig Venter, it is full with drama about politics between scientists.
ReplyDeleteI'm so burned out right now that the LAST thing I want to read is a novel about academia. I just finished my 7th year, during which I went up for and did not get tenure (got extra year after becoming a mom). I need a break, like a sabbatical, but instead I have to start back on the TT.
ReplyDeleteI've got a couple of older ones: Charlotte Bronte's Villette and The Professor are both magnificent. A very different academic world, but the themes are timeless. Also, one of my favorite portrayals of a professor is in a movie rather than a book: Wit, with Emma Thompson. Just an amazing movie.
ReplyDeleteI love well-characterized lablit!
ReplyDeleteBradbury's History Man
ReplyDeleteMoo, The History Man, Small World, The Rebel Angels and Possession are all good.
ReplyDeleteI also enjoyed the collection of longish short stories "Publish and Perish: Three Tales of Tenure and Terror".
I notice that most academic novels focus on the humanities. Other than Intuition are there any that focus on science?
I am so glad you mentioned these books. I was looking for a book to read, and turns out these are in our library. Happy me :)
ReplyDeleteBig giant ditto to Ken Alder's The Measure of All Things. It's not academic literature in the same way that Moo is - the only one on the lists that I've read), but it's kind of science-adventure non-fiction.
ReplyDelete(I did not enjoy Moo at all.)
The Historian, by Elizabeth Kostova. I don't know if this would be classed as academic fiction as I honestly have no idea where it laid when I read it. It was strongly steeped in the quest of truth from the background of history, kind of like an historic take on the story of Dracula, but it's the quest for truth that gripped me the most.
ReplyDeleteI recommend "Timescape" by Gregory Benford. Whilst being nominally science fiction, it has a large amount of the book set in the physics department of UC-La Jolla.
ReplyDeleteBenford is a professor of physics.
I also recommend David Lodge's books, including one which is not on the original list - "Thinks".
Loved "Straight Man," but the other novels by Russo are at least as good; "Nobody's Fool" is one of my all-time favorite novels. (And, hey, one of the characters is a professor.)
ReplyDeleteCannot stand Tom Wolfe & won't read him any more; "bonfire of the Vanities" was a throw-it-against-the-wall kind of hate, so there's nothing to make me pick up the Charlotte one.
Neal Stephenson's "Cryptonomicon" isn't an academic novel, per se, but one of the characters is kind of an escapee from academe. Plus, it's a great read. And the new one, "Anathem," is academic in its own way.
Ooh, I forgot one - Mendel's Dwarf, by Simon Mawer. It's about genetics. Easter Island, which I mentioned earlier, is about a (female) palynologist.
ReplyDeleteI love Connie Willis' writings, and she has a great academia short story called "In the Late Cretaceous." It's in the collection of her short stories called Impossible Things. Many of her other books are centered on research and academia, and in particular Doomsday Book, which is a multiple award winner. She is fabulous!
ReplyDeleteHaven't read Straight Man but will check it out.
Yes, Easter Island is an excellent sciency/academic novel. It is a fantastic novel on its own and its depiction of scientific work, gender issues, and relationships in science is just amazing. Andrea Barrett's stuff is also very good in this genre (lablit, relationships, gender issues): Servants of the Map, Ship Fever, Voyage of the Narwhal, Middle Kingdom...a lot of her stuff could also be classed as historical novels but there are also works that deal with more present day stuff.
ReplyDeleteI love anything by James Hynes: "Publish and perish" and "The lecturer's tale" mostly play out in an academic setting. His most recent one, "Kings of infinite space", picks up one of the characters from "Publish and perish". He's out of a job and doing admin work, but things get very... strange. Of course, Russo's "Straight man" is one of the funniest books ever.
ReplyDelete