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INTERVIEW ARCHIVE INDEX

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1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s
A-E F-J K-O P-T U-Z

Kingsley Amis
KINGSLEY AMIS
1975

“Being American is, I think, a very difficult thing in art, because all the elements are European . . . “
W. H. Auden
W. H. AUDEN
1974

On hippies: “What I do like about them is that they have tried to revive the spirit of ‘Carnival.’ But I'm afraid that when they renounce work entirely, the fun turns ugly.”

John Berryman
JOHN BERRYMAN
1972

“I think that what happens in my poetic work in the future will depend on my being knocked in the face, and thrown flat, and given cancer, and all kinds of other things short of senile dementia.”
Anthony Burgess
ANTHONY BURGESS
1973

“. . . if [other writers] can spend—as one of my American girl students did—ten pages on the act of fellatio without embarrassing themselves, very good luck to them.”

James M. Cain
JAMES M. CAIN
1978

“Writing a novel is like working on foreign policy. There are problems to be solved. It's not all inspirational.”
John Cheever
JOHN CHEEVER
1976

“Fiction must compete with first-rate reporting. If you cannot write a story that is equal to a factual account of battle in the streets or demonstrations, then you can't write a story.”

James Dickey
JAMES DICKEY
1976

On Allen Ginsberg: “I think Ginsberg has done more harm to the craft that I honor and live by than anybody else . . . ”
Joan Didion
JOAN DIDION
1978

“Another thing I need to do, when I'm near the end of the book, is sleep in the same room with it. . . . Somehow the book doesn't leave you when you're asleep right next to it.”

J. P. Donleavy
J. P. DONLEAVY
1975

On fan recognition: “My wife thinks I'm constantly walking around thinking I'm famous and that someone's recognized me when all they're looking at is my possible bad taste in clothing.”
Margaret Drabble
MARGARET DRABBLE
1978

“The whole question of free will and choice and determinism is inevitably interesting to a novelist. Are your characters puppets in the hands of fate or are they really able to make free choices?”

Stanley Elkin
STANLEY ELKIN
1976

“We all die, yes? We suffer, correct? The score keeps changing, is it not so? And Mommy holds us on the teeter-totter before we can sit upright on chairs.”
John Gardner
JOHN GARDNER
1979

“While my father was milking the cows my mother would come out and read something to him—Lear, say—leaving out the part of whomever my father felt like being that day, and he'd answer his lines from the cow.”

William Gass
WILLIAM GASS
1977

“Getting even is one great reason for writing.”
William Goyen
WILLIAM GOYEN
1976

“It is enraging to work in words, sometimes; no wonder writers are often nervous and crazy: Paint seems to be a more benevolent, a more soothing and serene-making medium.”

Joseph Heller
JOSEPH HELLER
1974

“Often when I am very tired, just before going to bed, while washing my face and brushing my teeth, my mind gets very clear . . .”
David Ignatow
DAVID IGNATOW
1979

“I'm not a Buddha in the sense of I can sit under a tree for a thousand years. Who can? The climate doesn't allow for it, anyway . . . ”

Christopher Isherwood
CHRISTOPHER ISHERWOOD
1974

On writing for the entertainment industry: “I'll bet Shakespeare compromised himself a lot; anybody who's in the entertainment industry does to some extent. But are you going to sink or swim?”
Jerzy Kosinski
JERZY KOSINSKI
1972

“[Nabokov’s] language is made visible . . . like a veil or transparent curtain. You cannot help seeing the curtain as you peek into the intimate rooms behind.”

PETER LEVI
1979

“. . . whoever you are, you've got to start from where you are. If you're a sailor, and only know sailor's language, well, write in it, for God's sake.”
ARCHIBALD MACLEISH
1974

“. . . The Greeks regarded what we call ‘public’ experience as part of human experience. This is what gives such ground and scope and humanity to Greek poetry at its greatest.”

Bernard Malamud
BERNARD MALAMUD
1975

“Comedy, I imagine, is harder to do consistently than tragedy, but I like it spiced in the wine of sadness.”
PABLO NERUDA
1971

“My house has been burned; I have been detained more than once; I have been exiled; they have declared me incommunicado . . . Very well then. I'm not comfortable with what I have.”

Joyce Carol Oates
JOYCE CAROL OATES
1978

“I have beliefs, of course, like everyone—but I don't always believe in them.”
Charles Olson
CHARLES OLSON
1970

“I've been very lucky, very lucky. I'm sorry, but I was born with a towel on my head.”

ANTHONY POWELL
1978

On seeing a sexually suggestive billboard: “ . . . I'm not sure that I really particularly want to see [the actor] having her. I think my own imagination would be better about that than him doing it.”
JEAN RHYS
1979

“One day in the snow I felt so tired. I thought, ‘Damn it, I'll sit down. I can't go on’ . . . So I sat down on the ground. But it was so cold I got up. Oh yes, I used to try to imagine death, but I always come up against a wall.”

GEORGE SEFERIS
1970

“In English the expression ‘ancient Greece’ includes the meaning of ‘finished,’ whereas for us Greece goes on living, for better or for worse; it is in life, has not expired yet.”
Anne Sexton
ANNE SEXTON
1971

“Sylvia and I would talk at length about our first suicide . . . between the free potato chips . . . We talked death with burned-up intensity, both of us drawn to it like moths to an electric lightbulb, sucking on it.”

Irwin Shaw
IRWIN SHAW
1979

“The most brilliant example [of good editing] in our time
. . . was Ezra Pound’s editing of The Waste Land, which made the poem infinitely better.”
JOHN STEINBECK
1975

“Writing to me is a deeply personal, even a secret function and when the product I turned loose it is cut off from me and I have no sense of its being mine. Consequently criticism doesn’t mean anything to me. As a disciplinary matter, it is too late.”

Gore Vidal
GORE VIDAL
1974

“One of the reasons that the gifted Hemingway never wrote a good novel was that nothing interested him except a few sensuous experiences, like killing things and fucking . . . ”
Kurt Vonnegut
KURT VONNEGUT
1977

On why a person would insert a set of false teeth between the cheeks of his (or her) ass: “In order to bite the buttons off the back seats of taxicabs. That's the only reason twerps do it. It's all that turns them on.”

Eudora Welty
EUDORA WELTY
1972

“Once you're into a story everything seems to apply—what you overhear on a city bus is exactly what your character would say on the page you're writing. Wherever you go, you meet part of your story.”
JESSAMYN WEST
1977

On her childhood scrapbook: “In it, you can see, I have written thirty plots. Across about half of them, I have written, ‘NUTS.’”

John Hall Wheelock
JOHN HALL WHEELOCK
1976

“Music, perhaps, comes nearest to reality . . . the mathematical relationships within the universe made audible. All the arts tend to that, but in music it seems to succeed . . . ”
Richard Wilbur
RICHARD WILBUR
1977

“A man like Sartre can get a whole book out of a proposition which is, on the face of it, untrue . . . ”

P. G. Wodehouse
P. G. WODEHOUSE
1975

“The thing to do is to say to yourself, 'Which are my big scenes?' and then get every drop of juice out of them.”
James Wright
JAMES WRIGHT
1975

“Human beings are unhappily part of nature, perhaps nature become conscious of itself . . . I love Nietzsche, who called man 'the sick animal.’”

Marguerite Young
MARGUERITE YOUNG
1977

“At the age of eighteen all young poets are sure they will be dead at twenty-one . . . ”
 
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The Paris Review Interview Archive

Since 1953, when the first issue of the magazine appeared with an interview of E. M. Forster, our Q&A encounters with the great writers of our times have come to be recognized as a sort of literary genre unto themselves: the Paris Review interview. More than fifty years—and more than three hundred interviews—later, the archive continues to grow with each new issue of the magazine. In November 2006, the first volume of a four-book set of The Paris Review Interviews was celebrated by reviewers across the English-speaking world. In tandem with this publishing project, we offer here online a complete index of every interview ever published, searchable by author and by date—as well as a substantial sampling of the archive’s finest interviews, posted in their entirety. Taken together, these conversations with novelists, poets, playwrights, essayists, biographers, journalists, and critics constitute what Salman Rushdie calls “the finest available inquiry into the ‘how’ of literature.”

To read Philip Gourevitch's introduction to the first volume of The Paris Review Interviews, click here.


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