Rachel Kushner Once Threw a Bret Easton Ellis Novel Across Her Room (and Other Tidbits)

Date:

Share post:


Rachel Kushner’s novel, Creation Lake, is available now from Scribner, so we asked her a few questions about writing, reading, organizing books, and more.

Article continues after advertisement

*
Who do you most wish would read your book?

Just yesterday I went to UPS to mail a copy of my new novel to Michèle Bernstein, who was a member of the Situationist International and married to its founder, Guy Debord. She is now ninety-two, and apparently as ravishing as she ever was, according to Greil Marcus, who saw her recently in Paris, and was the one who gave me an address for her, and suggested I should send her Creation Lake, which has a bit about Debord and the SI in it.

Will she read it? We shall see. But the very process of sending it felt like some kind of rite. Even the price to send it—forty-seven dollars—was part of this rite. Anything less, and it would have seemed too easy to attempt to reach this very grand person, a living embodiment of twentieth-century radical history.

*
How do you tackle writers block?

Article continues after advertisement

The block and the tackle work best together, to lift something very heavy.

*
What book has elicited the most intense emotional reaction from you (made you laugh, cry, be angry)?

When I read Less than Zero, as a teenager, I threw the book across the room the moment I read the final line, so disgusted was I by the bleakness of world and the depravity of the final scene. But now, I revere that novel, and will be writing an introduction to a fortieth anniversary edition!

*
Which non-literary piece of culture—film, tv show, painting, song—could you not imagine your life without?

I can’t imagine life without the movies. I live without tv quite happily and by choice. Music has been a bonus, because my son is a musician.

Article continues after advertisement

Just went to look at a friend’s paintings, the artist James Hayward, and especially appreciated his “tondos,” which he paints with his toes, but again, it’s the movies that are my spiritual nourishment among the arts you name.

*
How do you organize your bookshelves?

Downstairs in a shared library with my husband it’s all alphabetical. In my office, there are shelves for each recent novel of mine that I’ve written, where I keep books I read “to help my cause.”

In my reading nook, in the corner of my office, I have four little shelves that are each dedicated to a particular writer, almost like ritual displays: Top is Marguerite Duras (even as there is a whole library of her work downstairs); middle is Clarice Lispector; next, Pasolini; finally, Natalia Ginzburg.

I also have two shelves that are only New Directions, titles I’ve either already read, or plan to. There are stacks of books on a side-bureau that are obligatory reading for professional reasons, and stacks of books on the floor I plan to give away, because I don’t keep a single book I do not plan to reread.

Article continues after advertisement

*
If you weren’t a writer, what would you do instead?

Conceptual artist. Serious racket. More money in it, too….

______________________________

Creation Lake by Rachel Kushner is available via Scribner.

Article continues after advertisement



Source link

Nicole Lambert
Nicole Lambert
Nicole Lamber is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes about arts, entertainment, lifestyle, and home news. Nicole has been a journalist for years and loves to write about what's going on in the world.

Recent posts

Related articles

Lit Hub Weekly: December 16 – 20, 2024

The Best of the Literary Internet, Every Day ...

Lit Hub Daily: December 20, 2024

The Best of the Literary Internet, Every Day ...

This Week on the Lit Hub Podcast: ‘Twas the Episode Before Christmas

A weekly behind-the-scenes dive into everything interesting, dynamic, strange, and wonderful happening in literary culture—featuring Lit Hub...

Lit Hub’s 50 Noteworthy Nonfiction Books of 2024

This past year was as dismaying as it was...

New Media, Old Anxieties: Why is “Brain Rot” the Word of the Year?

In its early days, “The Word of the Year” was drawn from the idiolect of policy makers...

The Thick Muddy Soil of Language: On Mosab Abu Toha’s Forest of Noise

Growing up in Cairo, I’d heard a verse of the Quran—verse 55 of Surat Taha—ring in every...

“We Need to Be Rigorous in Defending Our Experiences of Art.” Chris Knapp Talks to Andrew Martin

Chris Knapp’s States of Emergency was one of my favorite novels of 2024. In subtle, intricately crafted...

The 10 Best Literary Adaptations of 2024

I can’t believe we’re at the end of 2024,...