Newsweek offers up a long profile of Gish Jen, who talks about her life and her new novel The Love Wife.
When asked about her most significant literary influences, Jen cites contemporaries such as Philip Roth, Cynthia Ozick and Grace Paley. "They were Jewish writers who dared to act as if this were their America," she says. "They were a very big inspiration for me."Tellingly, when Ozick is asked, via e-mail, about Jen's place in current American fiction, ethnicity is not an issue: "She is an engaging and seriously reflective novelist who is among the best of her generation."
I know every writer has a right to put their ethnic background into their work, but does it not deminish from their work in the end? The best work, the work that endures, is "everyman" in scope.
Jacky Treehorn
Posted by: jacky treehorn | September 14, 2004 at 03:09 PM