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Conflagration Begins at Home
| Article
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18365 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
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9 / 1990 |
2,451 Words |
| Author
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Chilton Williamson Chilton Williamson, Jr., senior editor for books at
Chronicles, is the author of two nonfiction books and two
novels, the more recent of which is The Homestead. |
WILDLIFE
Richard Ford
New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1990
177 pp., $18.95
A good writer, who knows many things, will know this among them: that however good he is, and however many books he may have written already, he does not have - never will have - a lock on his muse. He will know that, whatever he has achieved in the past, success for the future is not assured; that beginning a new book is always like beginning a new life, beset by new and different perils and fraught with strange and unimagined difficulties.
He will know, also, that at the instant in which he ceases to be aware of all this, at that instant too he will cease to be a writer and become at best a commercial hack or at worst a pretentious self-imitator. Money may still come after that, and even acclaim. But the money will arrive with the mechanical regularity of a salary or a stipend, and the acclaim will soon acquire the cynical disconnected quality of advertising copy for a product whose name has become a mere household world. There is no good life possible for the writer who has watched this happening to himself, has understood what was in fact happening to him, and done nothing to keep it from happening.
Richard Ford is no commercial hack. Nor is he guilty as an artist of the fatuous self-parody that finally ruined Ernest Hemingway as a writer. He is the author of four novels and a book of stories, each book distinct from the other and marking a new departure for itself, usually in a new geographic and cultural
... (1992 of 13659 Characters)
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