HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesWhy do writers like Bill Bryson and others stop writing?

Why do writers like Bill Bryson and others stop writing?

Some novelists feel that they’ve simply run out of things to say.

November 07, 2020 / 09:26 IST
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In news that was greeted with consternation by his army of devoted fans, Bill Bryson recently announced that he was going to stop writing. “The world is full of lots of other things you could do that are enjoyable,” he said, “without any of the pressures that come with trying to do these things as a job”.

While this is dismaying for readers anticipating another one of his funny and informative titles to curl up with, Bryson is hardly the only writer to have entertained such views. In 2012, when he was 79, Philip Roth famously announced that he was putting aside his pen. It was a decision he stuck to till his death six years later.

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“Enough is enough!” he said at the time. “I no longer feel this fanaticism to write that I have experienced in my life.” Such dwindling of powers is what Martin Amis also darkly referred to with the publication of Inside Story earlier this year, which he called his “last big novel”.

He went on: “Any novelist beyond 70 is haunted by the question — when do I stop?” One reason, according to him, is that “your vocabulary starts to shrink at 65-70 — it’s universal and ominous”.