"I always want to write something better than the last book"
About this Quote
Ambition is easy to romanticize; Kidder makes it sound like a job requirement. "I always want to write something better than the last book" reads less like a victory lap and more like a quiet refusal to get comfortable. The key word is "always": not "I hope" or "I try", but a persistent, almost compulsory forward motion. For a writer known for immersive, reported narratives, that insistence signals craft as a moving target. The standard isn’t the market, the reviews, or the awards. It’s the previous version of himself.
The subtext is a little bracing: satisfaction is a trap. If the last book becomes a pedestal, the next one becomes a monument to reputation rather than curiosity. Kidder’s line rejects the prestige economy that can turn successful authors into brands who repeat their hits. It also dodges the myth of the "masterpiece" as a final destination. Better than the last isn’t perfection; it’s iteration, risk, and the willingness to fail in public while reaching for a higher bar.
Context matters here because Kidder’s career sits at the intersection of literature and journalism. In that world, "better" isn’t just prettier sentences. It can mean deeper reporting, more ethical intimacy with subjects, sharper structure, cleaner thinking. The intent is discipline: a private metric that protects the work from complacency and protects the writer from nostalgia. It’s a modest sentence with a demanding engine inside it: keep learning, keep moving, or you’re done.
The subtext is a little bracing: satisfaction is a trap. If the last book becomes a pedestal, the next one becomes a monument to reputation rather than curiosity. Kidder’s line rejects the prestige economy that can turn successful authors into brands who repeat their hits. It also dodges the myth of the "masterpiece" as a final destination. Better than the last isn’t perfection; it’s iteration, risk, and the willingness to fail in public while reaching for a higher bar.
Context matters here because Kidder’s career sits at the intersection of literature and journalism. In that world, "better" isn’t just prettier sentences. It can mean deeper reporting, more ethical intimacy with subjects, sharper structure, cleaner thinking. The intent is discipline: a private metric that protects the work from complacency and protects the writer from nostalgia. It’s a modest sentence with a demanding engine inside it: keep learning, keep moving, or you’re done.
Quote Details
| Topic | Writing |
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