What are Rachel Cusk's views on the role of novels?
“I think the novel has to stay attached to life somehow. It has to share the terrain of life.
[You] build a novel. You have to build it like a building so that it stays standing when you’re not in it.
That’s where I wanted to get to. Not a feminist space, and not even particularly a sort of gendered space, but . . . a female sentence, a female paragraph, a truly female writing that is not a response to men and the ways in which women have been constructed, and that isn’t motivated by anger or injustice or anything else.
Freedom, when it comes, is nothing if it leaves people un-free behind you.”
Rachel Cusk, The Art of Fiction No. 246, The Paris Review, spring 2020 edition
Where can I read more about Rachel Cusk?
‘Cusk has glimpsed the central truth of modern life: that sometimes it is as sublime as Homer, a sail full of wind with the sun overhead, and sometimes it is like an Ikea where all the couples are fighting.'
‘The monologues in the Outline trilogy are controlled trances, like Stevie Nicks at the end of ‘Rhiannon’: you enter the speed and the artifice and the belief of it with her.’
‘At some point near the beginning of Kudos, as she is letting a disoriented and hilarious writer named Linda talk, I lifted off the ground. Cusk herself seemed across from me at the table. She is doing it, I thought. Go on, go on, go on.’
Patricia Lockwood: Why do I have to know what McDonald’s is? London Review of Books, May 2018