If you tickle us, do we not laugh?
If you tickle us, do we not laugh? This is the first of several questions I want to begin to explore, with the goal of understanding how readers and writers connect. The tickle question comes from Shylock’s speech in Act 3, Scene 1 of The Merchant of Venice.
Shakespeare’s topic in that speech is the common humanity of Jews and Christians. Shylock asks, “If you prick us, do we not bleed? if you tickle us, do we not laugh? if you poison us, do we not die?” I’m intrigued by the mixture of tragedy and comedy in those lines, with laughter surrounded by bleeding on one side, and dying on the other.
If I put on my reader’s hat for a moment, and reflect on my favorite writers of fiction, I quickly discover that many of these writers do tickle me and make me laugh. Think of your own favorite writers. Do some of them make you laugh? Do you share their sense of humor? Do you share their view of the world? I’ll talk about Shylock’s questions about bleeding and dying at another time, but for now let’s listen to the laughter.
Laughter is one behavior that defines us as human. Laughter is best when we share it. There are few moments I enjoy more in life than sharing a good laugh. I may be in the audience, or in a small group, or at times I may be the one telling the joke or reading a humorous scene. The sound of laughter, sharing in that moment, is one of the best ways of bonding with others, right up there with sharing a meal.
But what about those times when it’s just ourselves alone with a book, an audience of one for the writer we’ve chosen to spend time with? We may not laugh out loud, or even smile, when the writer tickles us, but the connection has been made. The writer has given us characters we want to know more about, the writer has put these characters into action, and along the way we are on board with the story, ready to be tickled whenever the moment and the words are right.
We may not think about it at the time, but we have shared a moment with the writer, and, in a way, shared that moment with all those who read the same story. We have connected.
Let’s close with a laugh, shall we? William Goldman, the author of The Princess Bride, also wrote the screenplay for Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. In that film there’s a famous scene where the two train robber heroes, played by Paul Newman and Robert Redford, have been chased to the edge of a high cliff by a posse. Their only escape is a long jump into the river below. As they stare down at the distant water, Sundance, the Redford character, has a confession for Butch:
Butch Cassidy: Alright. I'll jump first.
Sundance Kid: No.
Butch Cassidy: Then you jump first.
Sundance Kid: No, I said.
Butch Cassidy: What's the matter with you?
Sundance Kid: I can't swim.
Butch Cassidy: Are you crazy? The fall will probably kill you.
Tags: Humor, Readers, Shakespeare

February 22nd, 2010 at 5:50 pm
Oh good post, Michael. As a writer, I'm inviting a reader into my characters world. As a reader, if I take a writer up on that invitation, I don't want to be disappointed. The writers whose works I most enjoy make me laugh, whose thrillers keep me up at night in sleepless suspense, some can make me cry--talk about bonding with someone you've never met! It's anonymous bonding delight with those that read the story, and laughed at the same scene, or dialogue. You are so right about that moment of connection, not just with the author, but other readers, too!
February 22nd, 2010 at 8:41 pm
Michael, I love your topic. As a reader, I read across the board, but if the thriller author makes me smile at an appropriate time, I enjoy the book. I love to laugh. As an author, my characters just naturally lead themselves to humor, but at the appropriate places. Since I write romantic suspense, don't want to make my readers laugh at the wrong time. But I do want them to enjoy the lighter moments between my characters. My coming release, DEADLY INFLUENCE starts off with a very frightened eighty-year-old woman standing on a street corner in downtown LA. There is no humor until the "Officer and Gentleman" hero meets the female version of "The Bodyguard", then the humor evolves naturally from the character's personalities. We need humor in our lives and the best books have some in.
February 23rd, 2010 at 11:24 am
Lynde, I think your genre is perfect for humor because it can come out of nowhere. One of my favorite writers is Raymond Chandler, who cracks me up with his descriptions of people, places, weather - he shows how you can really do something with nothing.
February 23rd, 2010 at 8:50 pm
Thanks, Lelani and Lynde, for your insights. Makana, Raymond Chandler is one writer whose books I can open at random to any page, read a couple of paragraphs, and just roll around in the language.
Chandler is probably the one writer I would choose to be, if I had the chance ... not to trade my life for his, of course, but just to sit at a magic keyboard and write a few pages with that kind of skill. Okay, maybe a whole story or even a novel. Then I'd be content to return to my old keyboard and tell my own stories.