Barbara Adde’s Reviews > The Paris Review Interviews, 1 > Status Update

Barbara Adde
Barbara Adde is on page 61 of 510
(Contd) But what about all the reasons that no one knows?
Oct 26, 2025 05:04PM
The Paris Review Interviews, 1

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Barbara Adde
Barbara Adde is on page 476 of 510
Joan Didion: Writing nonfiction is more like sculpture, a matter of shaping the research into the finished thing. Novels are like paintings, specifically watercolors. Every stroke you put down you have to go with. Of course you can rewrite, but the original strokes are still therein the texture of the thing.
Dec 12, 2025 05:55PM
The Paris Review Interviews, 1


Barbara Adde
Barbara Adde is on page 395 of 510
Richard Price: The first book is always the most fun, because when you write your first book you’re just a writer. Then you get published. Then you become an author, and once you’re an author the whole thing changes. You have a track record. You have a public. A certain literary persona. You can become very self-conscious and start to compete with yourself. No fun at all.
Dec 11, 2025 10:00PM
The Paris Review Interviews, 1


Barbara Adde
Barbara Adde is on page 375 of 510
Robert Gottlieb: At a certain point you have to face the fact that you’ve turned into an old fart - that you can’t tell whether the zeitgeist has actually changed for the worse or whether you’ve simply fallen behind and aren’t in touch anymore.
Dec 11, 2025 01:37PM
The Paris Review Interviews, 1


Barbara Adde
Barbara Adde is on page 327 of 510
Stone: We’re always telling ourselves stories about who we are: that’s what history is, what the idea of a nation or an individual is. The purpose of fiction is to help us answer the question we must constantly be asking ourselves, who do we think we are and what do we think we’re doing.
Dec 11, 2025 01:35PM
The Paris Review Interviews, 1


Barbara Adde
Barbara Adde is on page 334 of 510
“… have a solution?”
Dec 10, 2025 03:35PM
The Paris Review Interviews, 1


Barbara Adde
Barbara Adde is on page 334 of 510
Stone: America has managed to create a working class with the leisure and money to command the resources of the society. It without the taste to enhance those resources. From that derived pop culture we’ve exported. Now that isn’t evil but it is a form of pollution.

There’s a shared Marxist an American attitude that where there’s a problem there must be a solution. What about the problem that doesn’t …
Dec 10, 2025 03:34PM
The Paris Review Interviews, 1


Barbara Adde
Barbara Adde is on page 333 of 510
Robert Stone: I don’t believe this country has simply been some horror story of racism and murder. But we have incurred a blood debt and it is coming up for payment. The end of empire comes for everybody and it’s coming for us. So now we’re face with this area close to our southern sea frontier where people have it in for us and are only too eager to collaborate with our enemies.”
Dec 10, 2025 03:29PM
The Paris Review Interviews, 1


Barbara Adde
Barbara Adde is on page 331 of 510
Robert Stone: The idea that young writers ought to be out slinging hash or covering the fights or whatever is bullshit. There’s a point where a class can do a lot of good. You know, you throw the rock and you get the splash.
Dec 10, 2025 03:25PM
The Paris Review Interviews, 1


Barbara Adde
Barbara Adde is on page 195 of 510
“… surprising and revealing things, and educate and entertain us all. If a writer can’t or won’t do that, he should withdraw from the trade.”
Dec 01, 2025 11:52AM
The Paris Review Interviews, 1


Barbara Adde
Barbara Adde is on page 195 of 510
Vonnegut: “When you exclude anyone’s wanting anything, you exclude the reader, which is a mean-spirited thing to do. You can also exclude the reader by not telling him immediately where the story is taking place, and who the people are …. And you can put him to sleep by never having characters confront each other…. It’s the writer’s job to stage confrontations, so the characters will say ….
Dec 01, 2025 11:51AM
The Paris Review Interviews, 1


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