【UK】
Redux: This Satisfied Procession
Redux
Every week, the editors of The Paris Review lift the paywall on a selection of interviews, stories, poems, and more from the magazine’s archive. You can have these unlocked pieces delivered straight to your inbox every Sunday by signing up for the Redux newsletter.

Joan Didion at the 2008 Brooklyn Book Festival. Photo: David Shankbone. CC BY-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0).
This week at The Paris Review, we’re announcing another year of the best deal in town: our summer subscription offer with The New York Review of Books. For only $99, you’ll receive yearlong subscriptions and complete archive access to both magazines—a 38% savings.
To celebrate, we’re unlocking pieces from the archives of both The Paris Reviewand The New York Review of Books. Read on for Joan Didion’s Art of Fiction interview, paired with her essay “California Notes”; Zadie Smith’s short story “Miss Adele amidst the Corsets,” paired with her talk “On Optimism and Despair”; and T. S. Eliot’s Art of Poetry interview, paired with two uncollected poems.
If you enjoy these free interviews, stories, and poems, why not subscribe to both The Paris Reviewand The New York Review of Booksand read their entire archives? And for as long as we’re flattening the curve, The Paris Reviewwill be sending out a weekly newsletter, The Art of Distance, featuring unlocked archival selections, dispatches from the Daily, and efforts from our peer organizations. Read the latest edition here, and then sign up for more.
Joan Didion, The Art of Fiction No. 71
The Paris Review, issue no. 74 (Fall–Winter 1978)
Sometimes I’ll be fifty, sixty pages into something and I’ll still be calling a character “X.” I don’t have a very clear idea of who the characters are until they start talking. Then I start to love them. By the time I finish the book, I love them so much that I want to stay with them. I don’t want to leave them ever.
California Notes
By Joan Didion
The New York Review of Books, volume 63, no. 9 (May 26, 2016)
At the center of this story there is a terrible secret, a kernel of cyanide, and the secret is that the story doesn’t matter, doesn’t make any difference, doesn’t figure. The snow still falls in the Sierra. The Pacific still trembles in its bowl. The great tectonic plates strain against each other while we sleep and wake. Rattlers in the dry grass. Sharks beneath the Golden Gate. In the South they are convinced that they have bloodied their place with history. In the West we do not believe that anything we do can bloody the land, or change it, or touch it.

Zadie Smith at the 2012 Paris ReviewSpring Revel. Photo: Patrick McMullan.
Miss Adele amidst the Corsets
By Zadie Smith
The Paris Review, issue no. 208 (Spring 2014)
And who was left, anyway, to get dramatic about? The beloved was gone, and so were all the people she had used, over the years, as substitutes for the beloved. Every kid who’d ever called her gorgeous had already moved to Brooklyn, Jersey, Fire Island, Provincetown, San Francisco, or the grave. This simplified matters.
On Optimism and Despair
By Zadie Smith
The New York Review of Books, volume 63, no. 20 (December 22, 2016)
But neither do I believe in time travel. I believe in human limitation, not out of any sense of fatalism but out of a learned caution, gleaned from both recent and distant history. We will never be perfect: that is our limitation. But we can have, and have had, moments in which we can take genuine pride.

Sketch by D. Cammell, 1959.
T. S. Eliot, The Art of Poetry No. 1
The Paris Review, issue no. 21 (Spring–Summer 1959)
There is all the difference in the world between writing a play for an audience and writing a poem, in which you’re writing primarily for yourself—although obviously you wouldn’t be satisfied if the poem didn’t mean something to other people afterward.
Two Uncollected Poems
By T. S. Eliot
The New York Review of Books, volume 63, no. 1 (January 14, 2016)
Sunday: this satisfied procession
Of definite Sunday faces;
Bonnets, silk hats, and conscious graces
In repetition that displaces
Your mental self-possession
By this unwarranted digression …
If you like what you read, subscribe to both The Paris Reviewand The New York Review of Booksfor just $99.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Inside the Murky Process of Getting Games on Steam
2025-06-26 04:28The healthy masculinity movement is exactly what men need right now
2025-06-26 03:29'Fortnite' composer Pinar Toprak will score 'Captain Marvel'
2025-06-26 03:08'The Handmaid's Tale' revealed the huge lie at the heart of Gilead
2025-06-26 02:40The Sound and the “Furious”
2025-06-26 02:18Popular Posts
Episode 4: The Wave of the Future
2025-06-26 04:11What to watch online if you want to learn how to be a better man
2025-06-26 03:58Amazon Prime finally launches in Australia, at half the U.S. price
2025-06-26 02:10Operation Mensch
2025-06-26 01:55Featured Posts
Keeping Hope Alive
2025-06-26 04:04Here's how to finally trade Pokémon and add friends on Pokémon Go
2025-06-26 03:54Artificial 'earthquake' detected in Mexico after World Cup goal
2025-06-26 03:03Episode 4: The Wave of the Future
2025-06-26 02:23Popular Articles
Bomb Envy
2025-06-26 04:30'Transference' isn't your typical gaming experience
2025-06-26 03:15'Tag' and 15 other unbelievable true stories made into movies
2025-06-26 03:02Best iPad deal: Save $132 on Apple iPad (10th Gen)
2025-06-26 02:04Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (6863)
Reality Information Network
Philips now allows customers to 3D print replacement parts
2025-06-26 03:57Fashion Information Network
Gotti has a 0% on Rotten Tomatoes and the reviews are priceless
2025-06-26 03:54Palm Information Network
Unchill Stan Twitter turned Beyoncé and Jay
2025-06-26 02:55Highlight Information Network
Billie Lourd rocked her mom's iconic Star Wars buns at a baseball game
2025-06-26 02:21Fashion Information Network
Exceptionally rare radio sources detected in the distant universe
2025-06-26 02:19