I think that the real emotional content of lives tends to be negotiated in terms of small gestures, little courtesies towards one another, little provisions for one another's comfort, and that whether we're conscious of these things or not we read them continuously as a sort of...we see them as the fabric of our lives with others, and I think that a great deal of generosity and care and love and so on are communicated in what we would call prosaic gestures, and that's just lovely to me. It's a great part of my imagination of the character, really.Full interview (audio and transcript)...
Items of interest, mostly dealing with philosophy, politics, Christianity, or what-have-you.
Marilynne Robinson on Home
Marilynne Robinson on her novel Home:
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"A fool takes no pleasure in understanding, but only in expressing his opinion." — Proverbs 18:2