Interview with Mario Vargas Llosa, 25 February 2002
Voice
Raised Voice
00:06:20
Urania and his father are invented characters.
Voice
Raised Voice
00:47:07
Well, in my case, there is never purely imagination. Even the novels in which I have been less, let's say, detached of personal experience to write, I think there is always a root with this in my memory and certain images that are the raw material are to fantasize, to imagine, you know?
Voice
Raised Voice
00:55:58
Oh, because there are authors who are not in any way enthusiastic with the idea of changing the world? No. Balzac, for example, he was a real reactionary.
Interview with Mario Vargas Llosa, February 25, 2002
00:00:00 / 00:00:00
00:06:20 - 00:06:24
Urania and his father are invented characters.
Mario Vargas Llosa
Transcript
Raised Voice
Creative Process
Characters
00:47:07 - 00:47:33
Well, in my case, there is never purely imagination. Even the novels in which I have been less, let's say, detached of personal experience to write, I think there is always a root with this in my memory and certain images that are the raw material are to fantasize, to imagine, you know?
Mario Vargas Llosa
Transcript
Creative Process
Raised Voice
Interjection
00:55:58 - 00:56:14
Oh, because there are authors who are not in any way enthusiastic with the idea of changing the world? No. Balzac, for example, he was a real reactionary.