"To write! What a marvelous thing!” When
he was old and forgotten, living in a rundown house in the dreary
suburbs of Paris, Léautaud wrote these lines. He was unmarried,
childless, alone. The world of the theater in which he had worked as a
critic for years was now dark for him, but from the ruins of his life
these words rose. To write!
One thinks of many writers who might have said this, Anne Sexton,
even though she committed suicide, or Hemingway or Virginia Woolf, who
both did also, or Faulkner, scorned in his rural town, or the wreckage
that was Fitzgerald in the end. The thing that is marvelous is
literature, which is like the sea, and the exaltation of being near it,
whether you are a powerful swimmer or wading by the shore. The act of
writing, though often tedious, can still provide extraordinary pleasure.
For me that comes line by line at the tip of a pen, which is what I
like to write with, and the page on which the lines are written, the
pages, can be the most valuable thing I will ever own. ... [mehr] http://lithub.com/james-salter-why-i-write/
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