Less is lost (published in Spain by ADN), continues the adventures of Arthur Less, a gay novelist in his 50s who walks the fine line between feeling recognized and completely forgotten. More informationDave Eggers, the successful writer who does not want to sell on Amazon: "Spain is the most evolved society in the world" I do what I want and my agent gets angry." And I thought, well, winning the Pulitzer, doesn't that mean you can write whatever you want? I said to myself: 'Well, to the baton. "I was writing little things that I knew weren't going anywhere. After reading it, he issued a judgment on the other hand very literary laureate: "This is very bad." What he wanted, he finally admitted, was to return to Less, his previous novel, the fifth, a lyrical, pessimistic and plethoric work, about writing and growing old and being a gay man as he is. One afternoon in 2019, writer Sean Greer (Washington DC, 52 years old) sat down with the manuscript, of about 150 pages, of what was to be his new work after the award, about a car trip through the United States. The agent denies having opposed continuing that best-selling novel ("but he said it!" insists Greer), although the question is rather whether he ever had a choice. "When I won the Pulitzer, my agent told me: 'Now don't even think about doing a second part,'" recalls Andrew Sean Greer, Pulitzer winner for Less (2017) and, now, of the second part Less is lost.
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