
Fresh Air Novelist Julian Barnes Faces Mortality Without Fear
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Jan 15, 2026 Julian Barnes, an acclaimed novelist and memoirist known for winning the Man Booker Prize, discusses his impactful new book, Departures. He opens up about his recent diagnosis with blood cancer, blending memoir and fiction, and the philosophy of facing mortality. Reflecting on grief after losing his wife, he shares insights on memory's malleability and how contemplating death enriches life. Meanwhile, TV critic David Bianculli reviews the new series Star Trek: Starfleet Academy, highlighting its tone and characters.
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Hybrid Books As Deliberate Choice
- Julian Barnes treats his new book as a deliberate hybrid of memoir and fiction, choosing form by intent rather than genre rules.
- He accepts bookstore confusion and says readers must judge his work on its own terms.
Notebook Notes On Diagnosis
- Barnes recorded brief notebook entries after his cancer diagnosis to process the experience and its timing with COVID lockdowns.
- He frames his illness as random, a product of the universe's indifference rather than moral failure.
Detachment From Self-Blame
- Knowing his cancer isn't caused by lifestyle gave Barnes moral distance and reduced self-blame.
- He approaches medical treatment with curiosity rather than panic, learning from hospital routines.








