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- 📝 Hernan Diaz’s Writing Routine
📝 Hernan Diaz’s Writing Routine
“Writing is pure pleasure... even if it’s excruciating and difficult, and I feel that I’ve lost it.”
Welcome to Famous Writing Routines, where we explore the daily habits, writing process, and work routines of some of the most renowned authors throughout history.
Before Hernan Diaz published his first novel at age 44, he spent years on the margins. He’d written a full-length novel that was never published, submitted short stories that went nowhere, and worked in academia to make a living. “I had been writing for a really long time in the cold, dark shadow of universal rejection,” he told The Believer. Then came In the Distance in 2017—an unconventional Western about a Swedish immigrant wandering through the 19th-century American frontier. Published by a small press, without an agent, it went on to become a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.
Five years later, his follow-up novel, Trust, won the Pulitzer.
Set in early 20th-century New York, Trust is formally ambitious: it tells the story of a wealthy financier and his wife through four different voices, each in a distinct genre and style. It’s designed to destabilize, forcing readers to re-evaluate what they think they know with each section. At its heart, the novel is about power—financial, narrative, historical—and the people it erases. “Political and financial supremacy is simply not possible without a collection of myths to prop it up,” Diaz said in The Paris Review. “Fiction, storytelling, narratives in general are what support, in quite a strict sense, political and financial power.”
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