The Paris Review
Subscribe Current Issue Back Issues Interviews Blog Books Print Series Audio Foundation Events Store About

The Paris Review Interviews

Return to Interview Archive Index

Katherine Anne Porter KATHERINE ANNE PORTER
The Art of Fiction No. 29
Interviewed by Barbara Thompson Davis
Issue 29, Winter-Spring 1963
Purchase this issue
View a manuscript page
PDF Download a PDF of the full interview

From the Interview
INTERVIEWER
I remember that you once warned me to avoid [a newspaper job] at all costs—to get a job “hashing” in a restaurant in preference.

PORTER
Anything, anything at all. I did it for a year and that is what confirmed for me that it wasn’t doing me any good. After that I always took little dull jobs that didn’t take my mind and wouldn’t take all of my time, and that, on the other hand, paid me just enough to subsist. I think I’ve only spent about ten percent of my energies on writing. The other ninety percent went to keeping my head above water . . . Even Saint Teresa said, “I can pray better when I’m comfortable,” and she refused to wear her haircloth shirt or starve herself. I don’t think living in cellars and starving is any better for an artist than it is for anybody else; the only thing is that sometimes the artist has to take it, because it is the only possible way of salvation, if you’ll forgive that old-fashioned word.
PDF Download a PDF of the full interview
Look Listen Read



SEARCH     Full Search
E-mail this page | Print | View Cart | Check Out
Selections From the Current Issue
Summer 2010
INTERVIEW
R. Crumb, David Mitchell
FICTION
Katherine Dunn
DISPATCH
Julia Whitty
MEMOIR
Wenguang Huang, Victor LaValle
POETRY
Matthew Zapruder
PHOTOGRAPHS
Jeff Antebi
Authors Mentioned
E. M. Forster, Mary McCarthy, William Styron, Jane Austen, Emily Brontė, Dante, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Thomas Hardy, O. Henry, Homer, Richard Hughes, Henry James, Samuel Johnson, Montaigne, Petrarch, Pierre de Ronsard, William Shakespeare, Laurence Sterne, Ivan Turgenev, Voltaire, Virginia Woolf
DNA logo
©2010, The Paris Review
Terms and Conditions Privacy Policy Contact Site Map