
The Book Show Lessons in life, mortality and love from Julian Barnes
Apr 10, 2023
Julian Barnes, a celebrated British novelist and Booker Prize winner, shares insights into his latest work, Elizabeth Finch. He discusses how his upbringing in a family of teachers influenced his writing style. Barnes reminisces about impactful teachers and the traits that make them memorable. He also explores his complex relationship with religion, reflecting on mortality and the creative process. With humor and wisdom, Barnes contemplates literary legacy and the role of uncertainty in writing, giving listeners a glimpse into the mind of a master storyteller.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Raised Among Teachers Changed His Voice
- Julian Barnes grew up in several generations of teachers and experienced marking and books at home.
- He says that upbringing made him the opposite of a schoolteacher as a writer, avoiding didacticism.
You Become A Writer By Not Inheriting It
- Barnes argues writers usually become writers by not being children of writers.
- Reading offers alternative authorities that spark the desire to write.
A Teacher Made Texts Live
- He recalls an inspiring English master who connected texts to real life and spoke about 'birth and copulation and death'.
- That teacher made literature feel alive and relevant to students' experiences.









