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80 pages, Paperback
First published January 4, 2017
‘The greatest writers are also the greatest readers. Virginia Woolf, Roland Barthes, Jeanette Winterson – they all read, as Woolf put it, “to refresh and exercise [their] own creative powers.” They can’t stop themselves from writing about reading. They have origin stories of how reading and writing became as necessary as breathing. Julia Kerninon’s A Respectable Occupation joins the shelves of these biblioautobiographies.
I had an incredibly heavy electric typewriter my mother had lent me, and she had glued little labels with lowercase letters onto the keys because I found capitals confusing, and I wrote lots of stories about talking animals with my friend Pete.
An identical monument of books had saved her as well, thirty years earlier, from a hopeless childhood, and so she spread her secret before me, she explained what she loved most in the world, in a gesture that was also a potlatch, an immeasurably generous offering, which I might be expected to return one day with an even greater gift.
If I lost a manuscript and went crazy with panic, she would just shrug with no compassion at all and explain that in any case I would have to throw away or lose lots of books before writing a single good one. The best thing that can happen to you is a house fire.
I thought that to be a writer, I had to train like an athlete, like a dancer, until it didn't hurt anymore, until I didn't ask myself any more questions. I wanted to possess that skill.
the main thing is to have free time - you'll obviously work out how to earn a crust somehow - but free time is something you'll always have to scavenge, he told me earnestly.
I write books because it's good discipline, because I like sentences and I like putting things in order in a Word document. I like counting the words every night and I like finishing what I start.
I've been striding through literature like a field, where my footsteps flatten the grass for a moment, just long enough to see the path I've taken and the immensity of what is yet to be discovered.