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Norman Mailer NORMAN MAILER
The Art of Fiction No. 193
Interviewed by Andrew O'Hagan
Issue 181, Summer 2007
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From the Interview
INTERVIEWER
How does the matter of growing old affect your vanity as a writer?

MAILER
Well, I think if you get old and you’re not full of objectivity you’re in trouble. The thing that makes old age powerful is objectivity. If you say to yourself, My karma is more balanced now that I have fewer things than I’ve ever had in my life, that can give you sustenance. You end up with a keen sense of what you still have as a writer, and also of what you don’t have any longer. As you grow older, there’s no reason why you can’t be wiser as a novelist than you ever were before. You should know more about human nature every year of your life. Do you write about it quite as well or as brilliantly as you once did? No, not quite. You’re down a peg or two there.
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