It
bothers me when authors feel the need to show off their superior knowledge.
Even good ones can fall into this trap, though.
One
of my holiday reads was A Christmas Party by Georgette Heyer. I enjoy
her light murder mysteries when I am in the mood for something that doesn’t
require much thought. So I was disappointed when I read this:
When a leaden sky
heralded the advent of snow, he began to talk about old-fashioned Christmases,
and to liken Lexham Manor to Dingley Dell.
In point of fact, there
was no more resemblance between the two houses than between Mr. Wardle and
Nathaniel Herriard.
Georgette
Heyer used that as a lead-in to describe Lexham Manor, which was the setting
for her story. I understood the allusion only because I had recently listened
to Charles Dickens’ The Pickwick Papers as an audio book. Since I have
only read about half of Dickens’ works, I could easily have missed the
reference. I image that many of Heyer’s readers would have had no idea that
Dingley Dell was a country manor owned by Mr. Wardle in The Pickwick Papers.
Fortunately, Heyer’s use of literary allusions was minimal and easy to
overlook.
I’m
not saying that a writer should never refer to something a less-well-read
reader doesn’t know about. I often have my characters reading the books they
would have read during their period of history, but I do it to show the characters
as readers and use only the titles since the content of the book is irrelevant.
Or, if it is relevant, I give the reader enough information to understand my
use without having to research it.
Hidden
or double meanings can even be fun at time, but allusions that some readers
will miss work if—and only if—they don’t interrupt the flow and the surface
story is interesting without them. Disney handles this issue well. Its animated
films are filled with adult humor that children won’t get, but that doesn’t
matter because the story is also told at a child’s level. If my enjoyment would
depend on specialized knowledge or Mensa-level thinking, however, it isn’t the
book for me.
If you want to
infuse your manuscripts with allusions that show how smart you are, make sure
they work on an everyday level as well.
Because it isn’t very smart to write a story nobody
wants to read.
__________
The illustration at the top of this page is “Christmas
Eve at Mr. Wardle’s” by Hablot Knight Browne (known as Phiz) drawn for The
Pickwick Papers in 1836. It is in the public domain because of its age.






