Three-color annotation: how to read critically without ruining your book
The experience of finding a writer late — reading an author who died before you were born, who was overlooked in their time, who is now rediscovered — has a particular quality that contemporary reading doesn't. You're catching up to something that already happened completely. The body of work is fixed. There's no more coming.
I discovered Lucia Berlin through her collection A Manual for Cleaning Women, which was published in 2015 but collects stories she wrote across forty years. She died in 2004. Reading her in 2019 was reading something complete — a career fully expressed, a vision fully articulated, a voice fully developed. I couldn't ask for more and I didn't need to.
This is different from reading a living author, where part of the engagement is anticipation. With Berlin, with Carver, with Chekhov, you have the whole thing. The completeness is its own kind of gift.