"Failure is the body of a writer's life. Success is only ever an attire."
Failure is the body of a writer's life. Success is only ever an attire.
"Failure is the body of a writer's life. Success is only ever an attire."
Failure is the body of a writer's life. Success is only ever an attire.
'Good writers offer advice. Great writers offer condolences'
If you want to be a writer, then you'd better be ready to hurl yourself at the door. That's the message from Stephen Marche in this irresistibly droll broadside. Perseverance, in the teeth of rejection, forms the essence of a writer's life. It's what it takes, so no whining.
Even the greatest of writers grapple with failure. Marche's provocative, often very funny vignettes range through literary history from Samuel Johnson ('broke as f*ck') to Jane Austen's lacklustre publishing deals, to Dostoevsky facing mock-execution. The trick is to endure. As James Baldwin famously exhorts us: 'Write. Find a way to keep alive and write.'
For new and seasoned writers, Marche's words are salutary and, in a paradoxical way, consoling.
All writers are up against it. Success is just an attire.
'A sparkling cocktail of bittersweet jokes and fizzing truth bombs' - Jonathan Coe
'More heartening than a thousand cheery Instagram posts' - Vanity Fair
'Occasionally when the stars are aligned, someone writes a work as provocative, informed and droll as On Writing and Failure' - Maureen Corrigan
Praise for Stephen Marche's The Shining at the Bottom of the Sea:
'The most exciting mash-up of literary genres since David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas' - New York Times
Stephen Marche is a novelist and culture writer who has written for The Atlantic, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The New Yorker, Esquire, and many other outlets, including influential essays about writing and AI. He lives in Toronto with his wife and children.
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