“I actually turned against plot very, very consciously and deliberately in writing The Corrections,” he said. Purity, on the other hand, is faster paced, and centers on four characters, including a journalist, an “icky” character, and a young, optimistic woman.
Though he wanted to capture the idealism that informs most young people’s world views, he admitted that there’s a disconnect from his own point of view and that of today’s youth. “In general you don't have to know an entire generation, you just have to know a few people from it,” he said. “I know some incredibly smart, well-read, emotionally sophisticated people in their 20s. I love them.”
So, in spite of accusations, a misanthrope he is not -- at least he doesn’t think so. When an audience member asked whether he feared going the way of Hemingway and other unhappy wordsmiths, Franzen responded in his usual fashion: “I have some advantages having come from a close family that places a lot of emphasis on loyalty,” he said.
And it wouldn’t be a Franzen interview without a mention of his greatest passion: birds. “I can look at a bird and be happy,” he said. “I can do that anywhere. So those are some things […] loyalty, birds. Those help.”
Below are some choice quotes from the interview, including some insight into his forthcoming novel.
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