Typing exercises

This article is written in German. Automatic translations:

Writing, of all things, to combat his depression!

An écrivain qui passe six hours per day enfermé in the room when the world is on the beach or on the beach, which you want to see in the real world? Of the réussites? The game video? Pourtant je m'en defenses. Je protests: « Non, les amis, vous n'y êtes pas! Pas du tout! If you spend six hours per day without my computer, you can't write a book, you can't wait for the croyez-moi, it's still pouring into the machine. Pas de méprise, mes amis: je n'écris pas: je fais des exercices de dactylographie. »

Emmanuel Carrère, Yoga

A writer who spends six hours a day locked in his room while everyone else goes swimming or for a walk—what else is he supposed to do? Play solitaire? Video games? Nevertheless, I defend myself. I protest: “No, friends, you are wrong! Not at all! If I lock myself in front of my computer for six hours a day, it’s not to write a book—I’m not prepared to do that, believe me—but simply to type on the keyboard. Don’t get me wrong, my friends: I’m not writing; I’m practicing my typing.”

Reference / Citation suggestion
Nonnenmacher, Kai. "Typing Exercises." Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature. 2020. Accessed on May 17, 2026 at 09:51 p.m. https://rentree.de/2020/11/03/tippuebungen/.

This article is written in German and can be found at https://rentree.de. Automatic translations into English and French are available. English, French.


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