quarta-feira, 23 de abril de 2008

John Cheever (1)

INTERVIEWER
I was reading the confessions of a novelist on writing novels: "If you want to be true to reality, start lying about it." What do you think?

JOHN CHEEVER
Rubbish. For one thing the words "true" and "reality" have no meaning at all unless they are fixed in a comprehensible frame of reference. There are no stubborn truths. As for lying, it seems that falsehood is a critical element in fiction. Part of the thrill of being told a story is the chance of being hoodwinked or taken. Nabokov is a master at this. The telling of lies is a sort of sleight of hand that displays our deepest feelings about life.

INTERVIEWER
Can you give an example of preposterous lie that tells a great deal about life?

JOHN CHEEVER
Indeed. The vows of holy matrimony.

Arquivo do blogue

«I always contradict myself»

Richard Burton em Bitter Victory, de Nicholas Ray.