Lipton’s Journal/February 7, 1955/466: Difference between revisions

m
Updated link.
(Created page.)
 
m (Updated link.)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{LJtop}}
{{LJtop}}
I’m one of the first novelists who was really a scientist. There were many novelists (like [[w:´´´´Émile Zola|Zola]] and [[w:Christopher Norris|Norris]] and [[w:James T. Farrell|Farrell]] who were behaviorists who became scientists), but very few physicists become novelists and I’m one of them. [[w:William Styron|Styron]] is a southern minister who became a novelist and that accounts for his strength. And his weakness. He feels such a responsibility. I have the happier irresponsibility of the crook-physicist. If this experiment blows up the lab, well I can always con somebody into giving me another lab. Viz. Rinehart and Putnam. vis. ''[[w:The Man in The White Suit|The Man in The White Suit]]''.{{refn|[[w:Alec Guinness|Alec Guinness]] stars in this 1951 satirical comedy about an inventor who bounces back after his failure. It won an Academy Award for best screenplay.}}
I’m one of the first novelists who was really a scientist. There were many novelists (like [[w:´´´´Émile Zola|Zola]] and [[w:Frank Norris|Norris]] and [[w:James T. Farrell|Farrell]] who were behaviorists who became scientists), but very few physicists become novelists and I’m one of them. [[w:William Styron|Styron]] is a southern minister who became a novelist and that accounts for his strength. And his weakness. He feels such a responsibility. I have the happier irresponsibility of the crook-physicist. If this experiment blows up the lab, well I can always con somebody into giving me another lab. Viz. Rinehart and Putnam. vis. ''[[w:The Man in The White Suit|The Man in The White Suit]]''.{{refn|[[w:Alec Guinness|Alec Guinness]] stars in this 1951 satirical comedy about an inventor who bounces back after his failure. It won an Academy Award for best screenplay.}}


{{LJnav}}
{{LJnav}}
[[Category:February 7, 1955]]
[[Category:February 7, 1955]]