I don바카라t think about hope. I don바카라t think that바카라s my job. I like the idea that inducing hope is something my characters do. Because it바카라s a default activity바카라we wake up, and we hope to presume that life바카라s going to be good today. When we바카라re met with difficulty, we hope that things will improve. But I think that negative capability is very useful for a writer because the truth is that life is blind. We don바카라t know anything, most of the time. We overestimate our intelligence, we overestimate our knowledge of events, and we completely underestimate complexity. We move through the labyrinth, all the time. Life is elaborate. I try to give form to that in my stories, to shape narratives that can actually convey the sense of the labyrinth, the sense that we are blind, and that the world is truly unknown, unknown to us. And, you know, it goes back to the Greeks. In many ways, Eilish is almost Greek in that she바카라s constantly making decisions to try and outmanoeuvre the fates. But what바카라s taking place around her is far beyond her powers and comprehension, and this is something that I바카라m always interested in. That sense of human agency within the vast and different world. The fact that we as human beings are always trying to find our lives, we바카라re trying to find meaning for who we are. But the world around us is silent, it is indifferent, and it doesn바카라t give a damn. And how do you reconcile these two things? The modern world is defined by individuality. And yet, every so often, all of us will have an encounter with reality.