E-Book Content
WRITERS AT WORK
Third Series
Previously published
WRITERS AT WORK The Paris Review Interviews FIRST SERIES
Edited, and with an Introduction, by Matcotm CowLry
E.. M. Forster
Frank O’Connor
Francois Mauriac Joyce Cary Dorothy Parker James Thurber Thornton Wilder William Faulkner Georges Simenon
Robert Penn Warren Alberto Moravia Nelson Algren Angus Wilson William Styron Truman Capote Francoise Sagan SECOND SERIES
Introduced by Van Wyck Brooks Robert Frost Ezra Pound Marianne Moore T.S. Eliot Boris Pasternak Katherine Anne Porter Henry Miller
Aldous Huxley Ernest Hemingway S. J. Perelman Lawrence Durrell Mary McCarthy Ralph Ellison Robert Lowell
SDSSDAISDIESEDIEOSEOSEOSENSES
Writers at Work £93
The Paris Review Interviews THIRD SERIES
Introduced by Alfred Kazin
NEW YORK: THE VIKING PRESS
SDSDSEVSEISOSEOSEDSEOIEOSEOSEOSEOS SSEDAMSVIEVICOSEOSEVIENTOSENSES
The interviews and biographical notes in this volume have been prepared for book publication by George Plimpton Copyright © 1967 by The Paris Review,Inc. Copyright in all countries of the International Copyright Union All rights reserved
Published in 1967 by The Viking Press,Inc.
625 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022 Published simultaneously in Canada by
The Macmillan Company of Canada Limited Library of Congress catalog card number: 66~15912 Printed in U.S.A.
Contents Introduction by Alfred Kazin
V1l
WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS BLAISE CENDRARS
31
JEAN COCTEAU
57
LOUIS-FERDINAND CELINE
83
EVELYN WAUGH
103
LILLIAN HELLMAN
115
WILLIAM BURROUGHS
141
SAUL BELLOW
175
ARTHUR MILLER
197
10.
JAMES JONES
231
11.
NORMAN MAILER
251
12.
ALLEN GINSBERG
1 3.
EDWARD ALBEE
321
14.
HAROLD PINTER
347
Introduction
HE Paris Review interviews (of which this is the third selection Ti book form) have been unusually sensitive and adroit exerclses in getting contemporary writers to reveal themselves. They
have been the best recent examples of the biographical art of the
profile. The classic interview, which Boswell and Eckermann practiced in order to write their respective books on Johnson and Goethe, is surely something else—a form of WisdomLiterature. It seeks a Lesson From The Master(traditionally no smaller man is worth interviewing), and in it the interviewer plays the role of disciple. His job is to put the Master’s views on life into book form—the most notable recent example is the book that Lucien Price called Dialogues of Alfred North Whitehead. Because he is usually dealing with a great thinker’s comprehensive and universal philosophy, the many branches of one great tree, he will notice inconsistencies, will draw the Master out on fascinatingly unexpected topics, will provoke the Master into unpremeditated eloquence. Theclassic interview with a Great Man probably had its origins in
religious discipleship, and the purest exampleof it is still Plato’s
Dialogues. What the interviewer really asks is: How Are We To Live? A profile, by contrast, is a sketch; what used to be called a
“character”—a personality is quickly built up before our eyes. It
is not an intellectual biography, such as a book on a single man seeks to become;it is a close-up, a startlingly informative glance— usually sympathetic, and even when it is not openly so, the covV1
Vill
Writers at Work
erage becomes a form of sympathy. A profile, by common understanding, is due someonecurrently important. The in