The only time I can feel myself feeling a little bit anxious and perhaps being a little bit more gentle than is warranted is if it's a first novel. Those are the moments. You do have to be careful because you don't want to feel like you're pulling your punches. But generally speaking, if I canfeel myself shrinking a little bit, you know, then I have to ask why and I have to fix it.
Parul Sehgal is a book critic for The New York Times.
“I write about books, I review books, but in a sense, to do my job at a newspaper also puts that pressure on a piece to say: why should you read or care about this? You’re trying to tweeze out what is newsworthy, what is interesting, what is vital about this book….My job is I think to be honest with the reader and to keep surfacing new ways for me and for other people to think about books. New vocabularies of pleasure and disgust.”
Thanks to Mailchimp and Pitt Writers for sponsoring this week's episode.
parulsehgal.com
@parul_sehgal
Sehgal's archive at the New York Times
[17:11] “Mothers of Invention: A Group of Authors Finds New Narrative Possibilities in Parenthood” (Bookforum • 2015)
[17:20] “In Letters to the World, a New Wave of Memoirs Draws on the Intimate” (New York Times • 2019)
[17:33] “#MeToo Is All Too Real. But to Better Understand it, Turn to Fiction.” (New York Times • 2019)
[24:18] Longform Podcast #354: Jia Tolentino
[41:39] “Peter Luger Used to Sizzle. Now It Sputters.” (New York Times • 2019)
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