Zadie Smith on writing, failure, and duty
From Zadie Smith’s “Fail Better,” a commuter-length essay you should go read each and every word of:
When I write I am trying to express my way of being in the world. This is primarily a process of elimination: once you have removed all the dead language, the second-hand dogma, the truths that are not your own but other people’s, the mottos, the slogans, the out-and-out lies of your nation, the myths of your historical moment – once you have removed all that warps experience into a shape you do not recognise and do not believe in – what you are left with is something approximating the truth of your own conception. That is what I am looking for when I read a novel; one person’s truth as far as it can be rendered through language.
Via someone’s Twitter feed, and my apologies for not remembering whose.