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The Guardian view on writers’ retirements: the sense of an ending | Editorial | Collector
The Guardian view on writers’ retirements: the sense of an ending | Editorial
The Guardian

The Guardian view on writers’ retirements: the sense of an ending | Editorial

Michael Frayn and Julian Barnes have announced that they won’t be writing any more books. It is a hard habit to kick “Retirement is the ugliest word in the language,” Ernest Hemingway said. Writers, like artists in general, aren’t the retiring sort. And what does it actually mean? As the playwright, novelist and former Guardian journalist Michael Frayn quipped 20 years ago , “Nobody comes in and gives you a clock.” Frayn was 72 at the time. Since then, he has added a further novel (Skios), a play (Afterlife) and two memoirs to a backlist that includes the hugely successful plays Noises Off and Copenhagen (a revival of which has just finished at the Hampstead theatre in London). Now, at 92, that clock has caught up with him. “Sadly it’s over,” he told Radio 4 this week. “Writing has been my life.” Continue reading...

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