Ive not read anything by Hillenbrand, so this is no comment on her - TopicsExpress



          

Ive not read anything by Hillenbrand, so this is no comment on her work. But I find this fascinating, that she can actually do what she does (even if she has little choice) without engaging in the usual routines that are supposedly absolutely necessary for a contemporary writer. What’s startling to consider is that Hillenbrand has done this with little access to the outside world. She is cut off not only from basic tools of reporting, like going places and seeing things, but also from all the promotional machinery of modern book selling. Because of the illness, she is forced to remain as secluded from the public as the great hermetic novelists. She cannot attend literary festivals, deliver bookstore readings or give library talks and signings. Even the physical act of writing can occasionally stymie her, as the room spins and her brain swims to find words in a cognitive haze. There have been weeks and months — indeed, sometimes years — when the mere effort to lift her hands and write has been all that she can muster. “In the middle of working on ‘Unbroken, ” she told me, “I went just off a cliff and became very suddenly totally bedridden — I didn’t get out of the house for two years.” To function as an author, Hillenbrand has been forced to develop a unique creative process. Everything in her working life is organized around the illness: the way she reads, the way she thinks about language, even the way she describes familiar places. When Hillenbrand writes about the “rough, rasping tremor” of the Pacific and the “smoky brown oval” of Pimlico, her readers feel closer to the ocean and the racetrack than Hillenbrand is ever likely to be again. nytimes/2014/12/21/magazine/the-unbreakable-laura-hillenbrand.html
Posted on: Sun, 28 Dec 2014 16:21:38 +0000

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