4.4 • 1.4K Ratings
🗓️ 12 August 2023
⏱️ 23 minutes
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The novelist Ali Smith first came across the work of Simone de Beauvoir in an Inverness bookshop, aged 18 or 19, and was instantly compelled by her “tough, troubling” prose. In this week’s long read, Smith reflects on De Beauvoir’s 1964 memoir A Very Easy Death, a slight, visceral book about her estranged mother’s death. What happens when an existentialist, bound ethically to a thinking life, confronts the end of life and thought? Why does a writer who prides herself on uncompromising truth tell her mother she is not dying of cancer, when she is?
Smith blends the personal and the political in an essay that grapples with De Beauvoir’s power to disturb and provoke, sixty years on.
Written by Ali Smith and read by Anna Leszkiewicz.
This article originally appeared in the 28 July-17 August 2023 New Statesman summer issue. You can read the text version here.
If you enjoyed listening to this episode, you might also enjoy Karl Ove Knausgaard: a personal manifesto on the art of fiction.
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1:18.8 | You're listening to audio long reads from the New Statesman. The best of our reported features |
1:24.0 | and essays read aloud. In this episode, Simone de Beauvoir and The Art of Loss by Ali Smith |
1:31.2 | read by Anna Leskovich. This article originally appeared in the 2023 New Statesman summer issue |
1:41.0 | available now. Read it online at the link in the episode description. |
1:44.8 | When I told a friend of mine, I was about to write this essay. She told me the following story. |
1:57.7 | She works in film, and one day recently, she was researching a project about young people. |
2:04.1 | She was sitting at the back of a classroom of adolescent school students. When she heard the |
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