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250 pages, Hardcover
First published November 1, 1979
Joan Lee: I’m shooting up your bug powder [...:] It’s a very literary high.
Bill Lee: What do you mean it’s a literary high?
Joan Lee: It’s a Kafka high. You feel like a bug.
(Dialogue from David Cronenberg’s film adaptation of William S. Burroughs’s Naked Lunch).
This business of writing about writers is more ambivalent than the end product normally admits. As a fan and a reader, you want your hero to be genuinely inspirational. As a journalist, you hope for lunacy, spite, deplorable indiscretions, a full-scale nervous breakdown in mid-interview. And, as a human, you yearn for the birth of a flattering friendship. All very shaming, I thought, as I crossed the dun Chicago River, my eyes streaming in the mineral wind.
“Read and reread Conrad constantly—a gift of transmutation, like Genet.”
“Sinclair Lewis said if you have just written something you think is absolutely great and you can’t wait to publish it or show it to someone, throw it away.”
“Somerset Maugham said that the greatest asset that any writer can have is longevity.” “Involvement with his own image can be fatal to a writer.” “Creativity comes from a series of shocks in which you are forced to look at yourself.”