It may seem curious to readers, but it is nevertheless true that most authors of creative writing shy away from revisiting their texts once they have penned the final full stop. Is this an intentional severing of an emotional bond? A necessity, to free oneself from the energy-draining magnetism of novel formation? A sign of exhaustion, or a fear of confronting flaws? Or is it simply a sensible and logical leaning not to unearth an intimate but ultimately ended relationship?
Writers as illustrious as Isabel Allende, George Orwell, Toni Morrison and Ernest Hemingway have all mused on this phenomenon. Here, we tap their thoughts to understand the psychological and creative impulses behind finished text avoidance and what it reveals about the complex relationship these writers have with their craft.
Creative Exhaustion
A central reason many authors choose not to revisit their novels lies in the mental toll exacted by the writing process, which is not simply a technical endeavour; it is an emotional and intellectual journey that leaves the writer deeply depleted.
Isabel Allende, the Chilean author best known for The House of the Spirits, once said that writing demands “giving up one’s soul,” as noted in Meredith Maran’s Why We Write. She explained that upon finishing a novel, she felt utterly emptied. Revisiting the text would mean reliving that draining experience. For Allende, the completed novel becomes a painful yet intimate memory, one that brings greater relief when left behind than when confronted anew.
Ernest Hemingway, renowned for his spare and potent prose, thought similarly. In his correspondence, he admitted to seldom rereading his works after publication. Classics such as The Old Man and the Sea and For Whom the Bell Tolls were now there for others. For him, re-reading them would be like “reopening an old wound”. Writing was a struggle, a battle waged on the page. Once concluded, he preferred to look ahead to the next contest, rather than dwell on old battlegrounds.