Impotence, fetishism, bisexuality, and bondage are all facts of life, and our fiction should reflect that.
— Rick Moody
I always wanted to write something illustrated, and the Details strip finally gave me the opportunity.
The Ice Storm, because of the movie, has had, or is to have, a vigorous life in other cultures.
I'm trying to read more dead people because I keep having to read stuff for juries and so forth.
It turns out that my memory is just not that great, so for specific scenes with people doing stuff, sometimes I'd have the details all wrong or I couldn't remember what happened exactly, so I just let that be.
My contention is that that style is just as stylized as an ornate style.
So while it is true that I find really dark stuff funny sometimes, it's also true that as a writer of books I want to have the whole range of human emotions.
All the stuff that I used to treat with contempt - you know, I'm an artist, man, I don't do that family stuff - has begun to seem really important.
This is odd, but there are certain things that are really embarrassing to talk about - one is my job and the success that I've had in it, and the other is money.
Genre is a bookstore problem, not a literary problem.
I am in Boston right now, in fact, to do work at the New England Historical Genealogical Library, where I'm trying to finish up tracing my lineage back to the seventeenth century.
I love comic books and always did as a kid.
I suppose I should say that I treasure blasphemy, as a faith of the highest order.
I judged about a zillion awards this year so I've been reading a lot of books that just came out.
The point is to balance on the edge between musicality and content.
I didn't know how to kill off a character unless I was able, as a narrator, to get really complicated. Because it was a big deal. I'd never killed a character before.
But that incessant drive to be out there in the literary universe that was important to me when I was in my twenties, like going to a Paris Review party or whatever, that seems totally irrelevant now.
I turned forty, and I'm finally going to get married and maybe have a kid.
Writing the book was itself a process of concealing and revealing.
Literature precedes genre.
My grandfather was a newspaper publisher and his paper had all the comics in NYC, so some of my earliest memories are of reading the family paper and heading straight for the comics insert.
It's also true, however, that having conquered the regional writer ghetto, I am now intent on conquering the nationalist writer ghetto and moving out into the world more.
I have worked really hard to defy categorization, to break down a taxonomy whenever it comes my way.
I made this list of stuff that it's time for me to try to do.
When prose gets too stylized and out of control - and Stein is sometimes a good example - when you don't know what the hell is going on, then it's kind of boring.
I'm trying to make sure that there's comedy as well as sadness. It makes the sadness more memorable.
The process of composition, messing around with paragraphs and trying to make really good prose, is hardwired into my personality.
Maybe when I'm sixty-five I'll talk about my literary life.
What genre it falls under is only of interest later.
Nonfiction that uses novelistic devices and strategies to shape the work. That's material that I really like.