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Reading And Writing

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I was eleven, no more, when the wish came to me to be a writer; and then very soon it was a settled ambition.

But for the young V. S. Naipaul, there was a great distance between the wish and its fulfillment.

To become a writer, he would have to find ways of understanding three very different cultures: his family's half-remembered Indian homeland, the West Indian colonial society in which he grew up, and the wholly foreign world of the English novels he read.

In this essay of literary autobiography, V. S. Naipaul sifts through memories of his childhood in Trinidad, his university days in England, and his earliest attempts at writing, seeking the experiences of life and reading that shaped his imagination and his growth as a writer.

He pays particular attention to the traumas of India under its various conquerors and the painful sense of dereliction and loss that shadows writers' attempts to capture the country and its people in prose. Naipaul's profound reflections on the relations between personal or historical experience and literary form, between the novel and the world, reveal how he came to discover both his voice and the subjects of his writing, and how he learned to turn sometimes to fiction, sometimes to the travel narrative, to portray them truthfully.

Along the way he offers insights into the novel's prodigious development as a form for depicting and interpreting society in the nineteenth century and its diminishing capacity to do the same in the twentieth-a task that, in his view, passed to the creative energies of the early cinema.

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Product Details
NYRB Classics
0940322382 / 9780940322387
Paperback / softback
823.914
28/02/2000
United States
English
64p.
21 cm
general Learn More