Originally Posted by
dark desire
When I read a newspaper article, in a not so good newspaper (there are plenty such), I feel that the job of writing has not been done very sincerely. Run of the mill best selling novels are a little bit more sincere than those. Beyond that the experience of sincerity depends upon one's taste.
Isn't reading a human to human interaction between the writer and the reader? A writer writes to the reader, doesn't he? In Notes From Underground, Dostoyevsky talks to the reader as if they are plural audience. In Jane Eyre, the writer talks to the reader through the main protagonist. Even when the author does not explicitly address the reader, he is addressing him, isn't he? By sincerity I mean the engagement with the book going somewhere deeper and then feeling a sense of justice done by the author towards your engagement with the book.