Lipton’s Journal/December 8, 1954/13: Difference between revisions
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It seems to me that the few occasions on which I have felt close to fainting were moments when I was abruptly face to face with the reality of a situation, where I saw the horror of it. So, last night, talking to Romain | It seems to me that the few occasions on which I have felt close to fainting were moments when I was abruptly face to face with the reality of a situation, where I saw the horror of it. So, last night, talking to Romain{{LJ:Gary}} about [[w:Franz Kafka|K[afka]]], I was close to fainting because of the awful and meaningless gap between writing a book and what one must do to publish it afterward. | ||
{{Notes|title=Note|width=60em}} | {{Notes|title=Note|width=60em}} |
Revision as of 14:57, 5 April 2021
It seems to me that the few occasions on which I have felt close to fainting were moments when I was abruptly face to face with the reality of a situation, where I saw the horror of it. So, last night, talking to Romain[1] about K[afka], I was close to fainting because of the awful and meaningless gap between writing a book and what one must do to publish it afterward.
Note
- ↑ A prolific French novelist (of Litvak origins), Romain Gary (1914 – 1980) was also an aviator during WWII and a postwar diplomat. Mailer met him in Paris in 1947 – 48, and became reacquainted with him when Gary headed the French delegation to the U.N. in the early 1950s.