segunda-feira, 6 de março de 2017

A way of seeing and thinking

Grace Paley has been gone for ten years now. What does a writer leave behind? Scale models of a way of seeing and thinking. Those of us still down here are always in need of these models, especially in times of trouble. (And all times are times of trouble.) We have, most of us, yet to find a way of seeing and thinking that works—that allows us to live comfortably and positively in all of this beautiful mess—but our writers, our dear passed writers, have put forth some pretty good models, so that we might suffer less, or at least suffer within some beautiful context. Faith, in the story “Friends,” says something about the act of tutoring children that is also true of the conversation between reader and writer: “Though the world cannot be changed by talking to one child at a time,” she says, “it may at least be known.” A writer as good as Paley helps us (at least) know our world by modelling a certain stance toward it that is so pure and distinctive that it makes us go back into the world and take a harder, fonder look at it.
George Saunders sobre Grace Paley na New Yorker desta semana. Outras mulheres, outros textos que valem muito a pena são este e este.

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