All this to say, yes, the writer wants to be read, expects to be read. Yes, the writer wants to start a conversation in your head. But can the writer ever imagine what that conversation is going to be like? I think of the mind-in-reading as one half of a Velcro strip, the one with the tiny hooks. Hen words pass by, some have the right coarse surfaces and stick. Others have no purchase and slip into the void. Perhaps they are indeed stored somewhere in the subconscious, as we are often being told; perhaps they form the compost of ideation. In any case, speaking for myself, I reckon that I remember about one per cent of what I read. Sometimes a book will leave only a trace memory, sometimes a memorable line, sometimes a character.