Biblio File, Interviews
Ask the Author: Edmund White
Edmund White comes to Books at Noon this week to discuss discuss his latest work, Our Young Man.
When and where do you like to read?
I like to read in bed with a classical music station on the radio. Sometimes I sit in a big, shabby 1930s club chair in the living room and listen to CDs.
What were your favorite books as a child?
I never read children’s books as a child though I’ve read some as an adult (Kidnapped, The Little Prince). As a child I read War and Peace.
Do you have any strange writing habits (like standing on your head or writing in the shower)?
I write longhand in blackbound sketching books of unlined paper and then I dictate to a typist. I revise very little.
What are five words that describe your writing process?
Headlong, distractable, impatient, bored, SELF-ADMIRING.
How have libraries impacted your life?
I’ve always been a library user—as a kid I lived in Evanston, Illinois and was a habitué of the Public Library and of Northwestern’s neo-Gothic Deering Library, where I read Max Muller’s Sacred Books of the East. I’ve worked in The New York Public Library, where I was a Cullman Fellow, and in the British Library near St. Pancras. At the British Library I researched my novel Fanny and at The New York Public Library I researched Hotel de Dream.
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