I’m a real daydreamer. Unfortunately I can rarely use this characteristic of mine in life. I sometimes get angry why on earth I didn’t study some kind of exact science for example physics or something else which is measurable and keeps me on the ground. One of the most important things that I’ve learned from my favorite writer (he was a doctor) is that one can always profit from rationalism, it teaches us to be reasonable, consistent, practical and it never goes out of fashion.
When All Seems Lost — and Even When It Doesn’t… As a writer, I read more than average. Not necessarily books that fall within my immediate interests, but rather those I can learn from, marvel at, analyze word by word, and sometimes even those that demand more effort from me than usual. That is how it is with Alice Munro. I bought my first book by her when she received the Nobel Prize. Then life happened, and the volume sat on my bookshelf—either I had no time for it, or it lingered somewhere at the bottom of my list of priorities. When I finally picked it up, I could hardly believe my eyes—or my reaction. First, I was utterly outraged; my blood pressure shot through the roof in an instant, and I almost started swearing in disbelief. I had barely skimmed the first few lines, yet that was enough to know: it was perfect. A true masterpiece. Excellence among the excellent. Every word reached the deepest layers of my soul. I was touched by its purity, its delicacy, the noblest simpli...
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