The second part of my conversation with Sloane Crosley about her debut novel The Clasp began with us discussing how books give bookish young people a map for their lives. ----more---- Crosley read a passage from the novel - in which poor Victor prepares for being beaten up by meditating on just this sort of idea. We then moved onto:
age, maturity and Don DeLillo's White NoiseCrosley's love of The Dubliners and the story, 'Araby'how a desire to be funny and, separately, The Secret Garden inspired Crosley to...
The second part of my conversation with Sloane Crosley about her debut novel
The Clasp began with us discussing how books give bookish young people a map for their lives. ----more---- Crosley read a passage from the novel - in which poor Victor prepares for being beaten up by meditating on just this sort of idea. We then moved onto:
- age, maturity and Don DeLillo's White Noise
- Crosley's love of The Dubliners and the story, 'Araby'
- how a desire to be funny and, separately, The Secret Garden inspired Crosley to write
- comedy: light and dark, joyful and sad
- 'I want to write something that's fun. I want to entertain'
- fiction, money, expanding horizons
- what next - essays or that album of ukulele music
- why Crosley is not a crime novelist
Read my review of
The Clasp in
The Independent: here.
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