De Beauvoir had no issues working at different locations at different time schedules, but Marquez could only work at a fixed schedule and in an atmosphere of known ambience. “I can’t write in hotel rooms or on borrowed typewriters … and the subject has to be of my own choice for there is nothing worse than having to write what you don’t want to.”
Italo Calvino, Italian writer and journalist, probably best summed up the eccentricity of the creative, narrating the fable of a Chinese artist who was commissioned by the emperor to paint a crab for his palace. The artist said he needed a palatial home, a mighty force of domestic servants and 10 years to do justice to the job. It was all provided immediately, but at the end of the decade, the artist said he wanted a couple of more years, and then an extra week. At the last moment, he picked up his brush and the palette, and within no time there appeared a crab on the canvas that the emperor found worth waiting for all those years.
The writers featured in the three volumes have their own individualities seeping through their articulations, but there is one running thread common among almost all — humility.
But the humility seen across the pages of the three volumes has nothing to do with fake modesty. Laced with an acute sense of self-respect and a wonderful sense of self-deprecating humour, it is of the most genuine and sincere variety. The manner in which the Nobel Prize has been downplayed, especially by the winners, is one such example. And some of the statements related to fame are downright hilarious.
The case of Italian novelist Elena Ferrante is arguably the most notable as far as aversion to fame is concerned. She has nine books to her credit since 1992, countless translations, two film scripts, and a horde of literary awards, but she remains unknown behind her pseudonym. In fact, her gender is no more than a calculated guess.
Interesting though it sounds, this aversion to fame and acknowledgement leads to some vital questions. Why do people write? What is the whole point of it? Do they want to create a better world?
Saramago leads the way among those who deny having any larger purpose to their writing. “I am a novelist. I write what I see around me. To change it is not my cup of tea. I can’t change it. I don’t even know how to change it. I can only talk about things that I want the world to have.”
Even Julio Cortázar, who was an Argentinian refugee in Paris and used his pen and his creativity on the basis of a politicised agenda, was not too keen on continuing with what he was doing. “If things could somehow change, I want to rest a little and then write the stories and the poems that I have always wanted to write; purely literary in nature, free of any agenda,” he said in the interview done back in 1984.
The last word on the matter shall fittingly go to his compatriot Borges. “I write not because I find my output particularly good, but simply because I can’t breathe without writing.” That’s a reason good enough.
The reviewer is a Dawn member of staff.
Fan-e-Fiction Nigari (Volumes I, II and III)
(INTERVIEWS)
By Muhammad Umar Memon
Maktaba-e-Daniyal, Karachi
ISBN: 978-9694190679
910pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, July 31st, 2016