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There’s opinion, ego, wit, insight, personality, history, and, as any Paris Review reader would expect, page after page about the craft of writing itself.
Picador; 528 pgs; $15
Let’s be quick about a verdict: this is the richest, most enjoyable
collection of writer interviews I’ve ever come across. There are 16
pieces spanning half a century, and the editors, getting off on an
admirably unstuffy foot, give their lead-off position to a clean-up
hitter of talkers: Dorothy Parker. At last once a page, she smacks a
zinger out of the park. How’s writing for the movies? “Hollywood money
isn’t money. It’s congealed snow, melts in your hand, and there you
are.” Working at Life with Robert Benchly? “He and I had an office so
tiny that an inch smaller and it would have been adultery.” What’s the
source of your writing? “Need of money, dear.”
And there’s Truman Capote, sofa’d and sipping something, nodding
Parker’s way: “I never write—indeed, am physically incapable of
writing—anything that I don’t think will be paid for.” Not so for the
cocky, on-high Hemingway, for whom the collection basket means nothing
next to artistic work itself. Hemingway tolerates interviewer George
Plimpton long enough to insult him three times about the inanity of his
questions; ever the good spirit, Plimpton still gives Hem a Great Man
at Work introduction—“He places the paper slantwise on the reading
board…moving only to shift his weight from one foot to another,
perspiring heavily when the work is going well”—that would raise Ron
Howard’s arms in praise.
For this first volume, the Paris Review editors have wisely
chosen interviews that have been structured differently, preventing the
book from ever becoming a repetitive series of Q&As. Kurt
Vonnegut’s piece, for example, is essentially an interview with
himself. The revered editor Robert Gottleib sent his interviewer out to
talk with writers he’d worked with—Joseph Heller, Toni Morrison, Doris
Lessing—and the final piece is a collection of their responses and
Gottleib’s thoughts on the same subjects. Readers who have worked as
editors will eat up the tasty bits about vast rewrites and
back-breaking edits. (Most will just be glad they haven’t had to tell
an author, as Gottleib did to Robert Caro over the phone: “I have some
bad news. We have to cut fifty thousand words.”)
Saul Bellow spent more than a month editing his own interview, and the
result, predictably, is intelligent but a little lifeless. Jorge Luis
Borges, on the other hand, is spontaneous and charming: “Look here, I’m
talking to an American: there’s a book I must speak about—nothing
unexpected about it—that book is Huckleberry Finn.” While fending off
his next round of visitors, Borges revels in the conversation, both
learning from the interviewer and displaying his own discriminating
palate. “Frost is a finer poet than Eliot,” he says at one point. “I
mean, a finer poet. But I suppose Eliot was a far more intelligent man;
however, intelligence has little to do with poetry.” Readers wanting a
second opinion on Eliot can flip forward to Rebecca West’s interview,
during which she gives this verdict: “He was a poseur.”
Ah, the offerings of this fabulously full book. There’s opinion, ego,
wit, insight, personality, history, and, as any Paris Review reader
would expect, page after page about the craft of writing itself.
“Nobody can write well using cocaine,” Richard Price cautions us. Makes
sense. But Robert Stone’s statement about writing—“It’s goddamn hard.
Nobody really cares whether you do it or not.”—is another matter. He’s
wrong, of course. We care, and we’re reading. | Stephen Schenkenberg
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