'Fame is difficult for a writer to deal with,' Thom Gunn writes in his essay on Allen Ginsberg's poetry. 'It dries you up, or it makes you think you are infallible, or your writing becomes puffed out with self-esteem. (Victor Hugo thought himself superior to both Jesus and Shakespeare.) It is a complication that the imagination can well do without.'
LRB 20 April 1995 | PDF Download
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