It's been weeks and I still haven't gotten over the little sentence tucked away in the middle of Updike's essay in the New Yorker on the late works of great authors. I include it here with the preceding two sentences as context:
Hawthorne's inability to carry forward and complete, "The Ancestral Footprint" was, in Adorno's term, a "catastrophe" for him personally. His struggles to find the key—the handle—demonstrate what a precarious feat it is to write a novel, organizing a host of inventions and polished details into a single movement toward resolution. Like sex, it is either easy or impossible...
Does this simile hold up? Am I screwing the wrong book?
Friday, August 25, 2006
The Art of the Novel #3 / The Art of Love #1
Labels:
Hawthorne,
John Updike,
The Art of Love,
The Art of the Novel
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