An Interview with Jonathan Safran Foer. Answer the questions on the next slide.
Interviewer: How did the idea for the novel originate?
Jonathan Safran Foer: …To make a long story short, I’ve tried to follow my instincts. I’ve tried to write the book I would want to read, rather than the book I would want to write. I’ve tried never to ask if something was smart, but instead if it felt genuine. A set of themes rose to the surface: silence, invention, anxiety, naiveté, absence, the difficulty of expressing love, war… I felt I couldn’t push them down, and I chose not to try to. Voices became pronounced.
Some characters became vivid, others vanished. A plot… happened. If it sounds inefficient, I’ve described it properly. I cannot imagine how I could have been less efficient. But maybe inefficiency is the point.
One can use a map and drive to a destination. Or one can follow the most interesting, beautiful roads–trusting oneself, trusting the car, and trusting the logic of the pavement– and end up where you couldn’t have realized you wanted to be until you got there. Writing, for me, is about following roads. And that intuitive, wandering approach explains not only why this book is so far from where I started, but why I feel it so personally, so viscerally, and so, well, loudly and closely.
This excerpt is taken from an interview with the author on http://www.bookbrowse.com