The New York Times car­ries an inter­view with V.S Naipaul, part of a pro­file by Rachel Dona­dio titled The Iras­ci­ble Prophet. Naipaul is his usual self in the inter­view: Provoca­tive, grumpy and full of him­self. He dis­dains the novel as an inad­e­quate for­mat , dis­misses Proust as “tedious” and claims to have “lit­tle respect” for Joyce.

[…]although Naipaul said he thought Con­rad was “great” because he “wished to look very, very hard at the world,” he also insisted that Con­rad “had no influ­ence on me.” “Actu­ally, I think ‘A Bend in the River’ is much, much bet­ter than Con­rad,” he said.

But Dona­dio dis­cov­ers this inter­est­ing lit­tle quirk as the con­ver­sa­tion wears on… that “[…] the more dis­mis­sive Naipaul is of a writer, the more likely it is that he has engaged deeply with that writer’s work.” Hmm.

How can some­one so obnox­ious and loud write with so much grace? If Naipaul wrote like he spoke, he’d be Sub­hash Ghai’s screen­writer, but as it turns out, he writes well enough to win the Nobel. Dona­dio explains the dichtomy,

[…] like so many of Naipaul’s utter­ances over the years, seem cal­cu­lated to pro­voke. In his inter­views as in his life, Naipaul is famously iras­ci­ble, dif­fi­cult, con­tra­dic­tory, an ide­o­log­i­cal light­ning rod. Yet in his writ­ing, he is an artist on whom noth­ing is lost. Naipaul addressed this split in his Nobel accep­tance speech, in which he sec­onded Proust’s argu­ment that “a book is the prod­uct of a dif­fer­ent self from the self we man­i­fest in our habits, in our social life, in our vices.” Naipaul’s work is as sub­tle as his inter­views are clamorous.

Link through Amit and Kitabkhana.

  2 Responses to “Sir Vidia Speaking”

  1. Definitly one of my favourite writ­ers, and as you said, he writes ele­gantly. More authors should fol­low cer­tain styles of his writ­ings, espe­cially the flu­id­ity and the moments where he inserts emo­tions. Books being expen­sive here in malaysia, the most recent one i read of his writ­ings would be Let­ters to his Father…(sorry for­got the title). Its an excel­lent book, and would definilty bring ppl to tears at the end.

  2. I can’t say he’s a favorite, but he surely writes bet­ter than he talks :)

    Books are extremely expen­sive in Malaysia, yes. Cost­lier than even the US — there seems to be no con­cept of a dis­count book store, every­thing is full-priced.

    Thanks for stop­ping by.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

   
© 2012 etcetera Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha

Switch to our mobile site