I've always had this belief that you want to write about universal truths.
From Geoff Dyer
One of the things I've really come to realise is that the chances of arriving at a universal truth are increased if you remain absolutely faithful to the contingencies of your own experience and the vagaries of your own nature.
When I'm writing, quite often I start having a good time when I see there's a chance to make myself look like a real jerk. I start chuckling and having an interesting, rather than a boring, time.
Sharing a room with one person is worse than sharing with six, and sharing with six is in some ways worse than sharing with sixty.
The essence of my character is an inability to get used to things. This, in fact, is the one thing I have grown accustomed to: an inability to get used to things.
As soon as I hear that there's something to get used to, I know that I won't; I sort of pledge myself to not getting used to it.
You read 'Stalingrad' by Antony Beevor because you're interested in the Second World War or Russia or whatever.
I guess, when I left university, I liked the idea of being a writer, and I thought then that being a writer really meant that you were a novelist. But if one of the impulses for being a novelist is wanting to be a storyteller, I never had any urge to tell stories.
We have in our heads a pretty well-defined narrative of the First World War, and there are certain events that are obviously key.
First, unreliability is not the sole preserve of fictional narrators. Second, the pleasure of patting oneself on the back for seizing on instances of unreliability and ignorance is, as the late Frank Kermode may or may not have pointed out, considerable.
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