John Banville is the 200th Art of Fiction interview at The Paris Review.
INTERVIEWER: Do you revise?
BANVILLE: When I finish a sentence, after much labor, it’s finished. A certain point comes at which you can’t do any more work on it because you know it will kill the sentence. The rhythm is set. The meaning is set. Occasionally I will leave behind a sentence that I know is missing a word, and I’ll go back to it later. I wrote a sentence like that yesterday. A man is talking about his wife, who’s a singer. She has just woken up in the morning, and he says, “even half asleep like this, she sounded a true, dark note, a thrilling . . .” I put in “cadence,” but I know it’s not the right word—so the sentence is just sitting there, waiting for me to find the right, the exact, the only word.
...le mot juste?
Posted by: Gary | April 09, 2009 at 07:16 PM
Bien sur!
Posted by: TEV | April 09, 2009 at 08:49 PM
He is so right. For years I thought revising my text would dampen the spirit of it, then I realised that that proposition bordered on arrogance; even "On the Road" was revised/altered/amended
Posted by: Clarity | April 10, 2009 at 04:12 PM
suggest a word to replace the sentence 'a Man struggling between love & war'
Posted by: Deepa | May 22, 2009 at 09:27 PM