I listen to audiobooks at 2.4x speed and I regret nothing
I want to talk about what happens when an author writes the same book more than once. Not literally — but when you can see across a career that a writer keeps returning to the same preoccupations, the same structural choices, the same kinds of characters.
Dostoevsky keeps writing about the relationship between suffering and grace, between intellectual pride and moral reality. Ishiguro keeps writing about people who have organized their entire selves around a loyalty that the world does not reward. Marilynne Robinson keeps writing about the specific quality of attention that a believer brings to the world.
This is not repetition in the lazy sense. It's what it looks like to take a question seriously over a lifetime. The later books aren't worse because they're working the same material — they're often better, because the writer has had decades to understand the question more fully.
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