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The author opens up about his Man Booker-longlisted novel, Umbrella
Ed Wood: Do you feel that, as in books like Umbrella,
exposing the absurdity of life is something that the novelist is uniquely
able to do?
Will Self: Some of my novels undoubtedly do target absurdities –
usually of human social forms, rather than life per se – but Umbrella
is not one of them. I think it’s a broadly ‘life-enhancing’ novel inasmuch
as it attempts to give form to the felt experience of living, rather than
filtering it through the mannerism of so-called naturalism.
EW: Which
book or books changed what you thought was possible in a novel?
WS: Joyce’s Ulysses, L.F. Celine’s Voyage au bout de la
nuit, Proust’s À la recherche du temps perdu, Borges’ Labyrinths,
Dostoevski’s The Idiot, J.G. Ballard’s Crash
and so on …
at We Love This Book
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