Shona SanzgiriQuote Symbolhttp://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/what-happens-when-we-decide-everyone-else-is-a-narcissistShona Sanzgiri
Shona SanzgiriThe Art of Fiction No. 231The Paris Review - Interviewed by Lucas WittmannFew novels stand for a place and time the way Bright Lights, Big City stands for downtown Manhattan in the 1980s. Narrated in the second person, Jay McInerney’s first novel tells the story of a young fact-checker, at a magazine very much like The New Yorker, who loses his way in the cocaine-fueled …
Shona SanzgiriFlipboardIcon version of the Flipboard logoA Conversation With Jonathan Franzenverified_publisherslate.com - By Isaac Chotiner“Manhattan is just all bank branches,” said Jonathan Franzen as he walked through the living room of his home in Santa Cruz, California. When he …
Shona SanzgiriTechnology changes how authors write, but the big impact isn't on their styletheconversation.com - Matthew Kirschenbaum“Our writing instruments are also working on our thoughts.” Nietzsche wrote, or more precisely typed, this sentence on a Malling-Hansen Writing Ball, …
Shona SanzgiriAmerican Literature Needs Indie Pressesverified_publisherThe Atlantic - Nathan Scott McNamaraAs books from major publishers get bigger and more expensive, smaller houses are taking risks on more creative, original works. For better or worse, writers and readers live in an age of the million-dollar book deal. The Big Five publishers (Penguin Random House, Hachette, Macmillan, HarperCollins, …
Shona SanzgiriThree Likes and a Re-tweetMedium - Daniel Paisner“If the same tree that falls without making a sound is turned into pulp, and the pulp into paper, and the paper into the pages of a hardly-read …