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Michael Chabon, an American author, is renowned for his skill in blending various genres and creating complex, memorable narratives. His novels, including The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, have garnered critical acclaim for their vivid storytelling and exploration of themes like identity, family, and the American experience. Chabon's work encourages readers to find beauty in the complexity of life and embrace the power of imagination. His success demonstrates that literary innovation can lead to both critical and commercial acclaim, inspiring aspiring writers to boldly pursue their unique voices and ideas.
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"It was fun. That was something I came to fairly late."

Fun,
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"He comes to this other world and he has to reinvent himself. Again, it felt natural, even though I'd been working really hard trying to come up with something."

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"It's good to have it over with. I worked on it a long time, and I didn't know what people were going to think of it. Would people like it? Would they buy it? So far it's been doing pretty well."

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"Louis Pasteur said, 'Chance favors the prepared mind.' If you're really engaged in the writing, you'll work yourself out of whatever jam you find yourself in."

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"Comic books were just the means for me to tell the story."

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"I found one remaining box of comics which I had saved. When I opened it up and that smell came pouring out, that old paper smell, I was struck by a rush of memories, a sense of my childhood self that seemed to be contained in there."

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"As soon as I read that, it clicked: that's my theater of war. It was exciting to think that I could write about World War Two from a totally new place."

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"I wasn't involved, except to the degree that they sent me drafts of the script as the writer turned them in. They asked me at one point to write a memo about what I thought of it."

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"It was an incredible resource. I'd sit with a big stack of bound New Yorkers in the library and read through, especially the 'Talk of the Town' sections."

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"What's going to be hard for me is to try to divorce myself as much as possible from what I wrote. I'll have to approach it simply as raw material and try to craft a film script out of it."

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"Every time another review comes out I let out a deep breath."

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"So it was scary, but that's how it goes. To my great delight, I discovered that it did all belong."

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"I love Richard Yates, his work, and the novel, Revolutionary Road. It's a devastating novel."

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"The things I keep going back to, rereading, maybe they say more about me as a reader than about the books. Love in the Time of Cholera, Pale Fire."

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"Moby Dick - that book is so amazing. I just realized that it starts with two characters meeting in bed; that's how my book begins, too, but I hadn't noticed the parallel before, two characters forced to share a bed, reluctantly."

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"The First Amendment has the same role in my life as a citizen and a writer as the sun has in our ecosystem."

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"That's the best thing about writing, when you're in that zone, you're porous, ready to absorb the solution."

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"I wanted to give readers the feeling of knowing the characters, a mental image."

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"I have a deadline. I'm glad. I think that will help me get it done."

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"People keep saying, 'Oh, you're getting all these great reviews, that must make you really happy.' I guess it does, but mostly it's just a relief."

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"I was thinking, too, of Superman and his fortress of solitude."

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