-
griefdustbitterlongings reblogged this from booklover
-
the-nomadic-writer reblogged this from teachingliteracy
-
from-the-water reblogged this from yeahwriters
-
chibiemperorintj reblogged this from booklover
-
yemelesshaecceity reblogged this from teachingliteracy
-
benicebefunny likes this
-
bearwonder reblogged this from kissing-the-shoreline
-
kathycwrites reblogged this from kissing-the-shoreline
-
evanescentreverie likes this
-
idrewyouasquirrelbecauseiloveyou reblogged this from kissing-the-shoreline
-
kissing-the-shoreline reblogged this from yeahwriters
-
stillarobyn likes this
-
eclectikmind reblogged this from yeahwriters
-
sensoriumm likes this
-
jvdbooks reblogged this from booklover
-
temporal-dimensions reblogged this from maybeimalittledifferent
-
temporal-dimensions likes this
-
maybeimalittledifferent reblogged this from teachingliteracy
-
sweetsweetsorrow likes this
-
stygianfox reblogged this from yahighway
-
melonny likes this
-
amnos-for-dream reblogged this from callylines
-
sharleenherself likes this
-
dontsailawaybaby reblogged this from booklover
-
childofthecounterculture reblogged this from yahighway
-
venuswicca reblogged this from yahighway
-
callistazm likes this
-
grimgrinninggirl reblogged this from yeahwriters
-
coral542383 likes this
-
lackadaisycool reblogged this from yeahwriters
-
writingwillow likes this
-
neverbabylon likes this
-
mymomoness reblogged this from precociouspublisher
-
stillpointmagazine reblogged this from booklover
-
6stronghands likes this
-
la-maladroite likes this
-
wordsbeforebirds likes this
-
writingfire reblogged this from teachingliteracy
-
shethewanderer likes this
-
whateverdose likes this
-
lakineasterling likes this
-
call-me-a-feminist-killjoy reblogged this from teachingliteracy
-
smallestfish likes this
-
delusionaldimwit likes this
-
darkscrapbook likes this
-
epilepticbliss reblogged this from yeahwriters
- Show more notes
In the last thirty or forty years, the writer has become someone who works on a well-defined career track, like any other middle class professional, not, however, to become a craftsman serving the community, but to project an image of himself (partly through his writings, but also in dozens of other ways) as an artist who embodies the direction in which culture is headed. In short, the next big new thing. A Rushdie. A Pamuk.
It’s rather as if the spontaneous Romanticism of the nineteenth-century poets had become a job description; we know what a romantic is (his politics, his behavior patterns), we know that is the way to literary greatness, so let’s do it.
The Writer’s Job by Tim Parks | The New York Review of Books
Is this essay as important to everyone else as it feels to me?
(via therichgirlsareweeping)






