Why I Went Home
Okay, it's a much longer story than you or I really have time for, but something struck me while reading a review of Lucinda Rosenfeld's latest, Why She Went Home. (I would link to the Times review, but I think it's from more than a few weeks ago, and I've been carrying around this torn-out paragraph since:)
In the movies, the malaise-stricken can get by on little more than a colorful setting and an exquisite pair of cheekbones, but in literature, bones of a more substantial sort are usually needed. Whichever bank of the river Phoebe finds herself grounded on, it's hard to shake the feeling that she's still sorting through a case of disappointed entitlement--the woeful burden of being merely pretty, smart and privileged in a world in which maybe only the gorgeous, brilliant and wealthy don't have to work for what they want.
And that's why I'm not hard at work on my novel.
In the movies, the malaise-stricken can get by on little more than a colorful setting and an exquisite pair of cheekbones, but in literature, bones of a more substantial sort are usually needed. Whichever bank of the river Phoebe finds herself grounded on, it's hard to shake the feeling that she's still sorting through a case of disappointed entitlement--the woeful burden of being merely pretty, smart and privileged in a world in which maybe only the gorgeous, brilliant and wealthy don't have to work for what they want.
And that's why I'm not hard at work on my novel.
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