In Roland Barthes' ' The Death of the Author ' he argued that the writer has no influence on the meaning of a text, that once it has been written it is for the readers to deduce meaning, what the author may have intended no longer matters. Should we agree with Barthes' theory, once the writer has written their work, they are obsolete. The social, political and historical context of the writing no longer matters. For Barthes the writer simply writes, and that is all. If we accept this view, then they become an invisible presence, like the elves and the shoemaker. A writer appears, writes, and then disappears. Perhaps this was easier to comprehend in a time when a writer's autonomy was possible. Now one cannot even share a flippant remark online without it being traced back to them. Thus, today and is it nearly impossible for a writer to be truly anonymous. Book signings and tours are almost as intrinsic to the occupation of a successful writer as the process of w...