FastSaying

Inevitably, most readers come to John Cheever's 'Journals' via his fiction. Whatever value they might have in their own right, their viability as a publishing proposition was conditional on the interest of the large readership of his novels and stories.

Geoff Dyer

ComeConditionalFictionHisInevitablyInterestJohnJournalsLargeMightMostNovelsOwnPropositionPublishingReadersReadershipRightStoriesValueViaWhatever

Related Quotes

I do understand my limitations as a fiction writer, which is why my novels are always going to be close to home.
— Geoff Dyer
AlwaysCloseFiction
Cheever constantly voiced doubts about his writing. Reading 'The Naked and the Dead' made him despair of his own 'confined talents.'
— Geoff Dyer
AboutConfinedConstantly
Novelists are basically inviting their readers to play a game of pretend. That's what fiction is: a game of pretend.
— Marty Rubin
fictionnovelistsnovels
I didn't read much of anything till I was 15, except Alistair MacLean and Michael Moorcock - the sword and sorcery novels - when I was about 13 or 14.
— Geoff Dyer
AboutAnythingExcept
One of my great heroes, John Berger, he's in his 80s now. One of the reasons that he's remained young and all-around fantastic is his ongoing receptivity to new things. I think that's important.
— Geoff Dyer
All-AroundFantasticGreat