Who Is the Bad Art Friend?
Art often draws inspiration from life—but what happens when it’s your life?
Art often draws inspiration from life—but what happens when it’s your life?
Robert Kolker New York Times Magazine Oct 2021 30min Permalink
A profile of Pulitzer Prize- and Oscar-winning author Larry McMurtry.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Jun 2016 30min Permalink
A secret hope of mine, which I now find hilarious: I imagined that once I had a child, I would become a faster writer. Faster, and also better. It’s hard for me to reconstruct the optimistic logic that led me to this hypothesis. I think I honestly believed that if I did not have the option to write badly, I would simply evolve, like that Lamarckian giraffe, into a more efficient creature.
Karen Russell Wealthsimple Magazine Mar 2020 20min Permalink
When a writer’s husband became violent, her career threatened to vanish along with her safety.
On Herman Melville’s literary career.
Geoffrey O'Brien Village Voice Sep 1985 40min Permalink
A profile of the writer.
Parul Sehgal New York Times Magazine Nov 2015 15min Permalink
A fiction/essay hybrid on the lies of storytelling.
</blockquote>“This stuff you don’t recall so much as suspect. Usually dark, not-so-nice things you think you could have witnessed, or had done to you, or – even worse — did unto others. Maybe there’s even a dim recollection – your cousin Johnny’s gray eyes with the bottom half flooded for instance, or your mother’s grim little smeared-lipstick smile, or the sound of your sister throwing up on the other side of the bathroom door. But really, these things are so shadowy and faint you can’t be certain of any part of them. You’d have forgotten these ghost-memories a long time ago were it not for one thing that seems completely unrelated and it’s this: there’s a dark and oversensitive stain on your heart.”</p></blockquote>
Frank DiPalermo Nailed Magazine Jun 2014 10min Permalink
"For example, I remember reading Hemingway and loving his work so much—but then at some point, realizing that my then-current life (or parts of it) would not be representable via his prose style. Living in Amarillo, Texas, working as a groundsman at an apartment complex, with strippers for pals around the complex, goofball drunks recently laid off from the nuclear plant accosting me at night when I played in our comical country band, a certain quality of West Texas lunatic-speak I was hearing, full of way off-base dreams and aspirations—I just couldn’t hear that American in Hem-speak. And that kind of moment is gold for a young writer: the door starts to open, just a crack."
George Saunders, Patrick Dacey BOMB Magazine Jun 2011 40min Permalink