The Art of Fiction No. 252 (Interviewer)
“I suppose that my work is always mourning something, the loss of a paradise—not the thing that comes after you die, but the thing that you had before.”
“I suppose that my work is always mourning something, the loss of a paradise—not the thing that comes after you die, but the thing that you had before.”
Explaining her remark that Henry James was “the greatest American female novelist”: ”Sometimes I try to lighten the gloom of discussions but I notice that no one laughs. Instead you see a few people writing down the name.”
“My mother mocked the Queen’s accent: “Efrika.” When had the Queen talked about Africa?”
”In Paris Blues the interracial is a part of the city’s glamour.”
I leave, for now, that scene that switched on a certain channel in my being.