P.A. > P.A.'s Quotes

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  • #1
    James  Wood
    “Fiction is most effective when its themes are unspoken. An ideal fiction has a kind of thematic ghostliness, whereby the novel marks its meanings most strongly as it passes, as it disappears, rather as on a street snow gets dirtier, more marked, as it disappears.”
    James Wood, The Broken Estate: Essays on Literature and Belief

  • #2
    James  Wood
    “If religion is true, one must believe. And if one chooses not to believe, one’s choice is marked under the category of a refusal, and is thus never really free: it has the duress of a recoil.” With literary belief, however, “one is always free to choose not to believe.” This, Wood argues, is the freedom of literature; it is what constitutes its “reality.”
    James Wood, The Broken Estate: Essays on Literature and Belief

  • #3
    James  Wood
    “The acquisition of a book signalled not just the potential acquisition of knowledge but also something like the property rights to a piece of ground: the knowledge became a visitable place.”
    James Wood

  • #4
    James  Wood
    “fiction is both artifice and verisimilitude, and that there is nothing difficult in holding together these two possibilities.”
    James Wood, How Fiction Works



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