Years ago, on the phone with Bill Buford, then fiction editor of The New Yorker, enduring a series of painful edits, feeling a little insecure, I went fishing for a compliment: “But what do you like about the story?” I whined.
There was a long pause at the other end.
And Bill said this: “Well, I read a line.
And I like it…enough to read the next.”
And that was it: his entire short story aesthetic and presumably that of the magazine.
And it’s perfect.
A story is a linear-temporal phenomenon.
It proceeds, and charms us (or doesn’t), a line at a time.
We have to keep being pulled into a story in order for it to do anything to us.
— George Saunders, A Swim in a Pond in the Rain, 2021, Random House, Ch. Thoughts on “In The Cart”, p. 11