Thomas > Thomas's Quotes

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  • #1
    Amy Hempel
    “I had my own bed. I slept in it alone, except for those times when we needed—not sex—but sex was how we got there.”
    Amy Hempel, The Collected Stories

  • #2
    Leonard Michaels
    “In 1982, Raphael Nachman, visiting lecturer in mathematics at the university in Cracow, declined the tour of Auschwitz, where his grandparents had died, and asked instead to visit the ghetto where they had lived.”
    Leonard Michaels, The Collected Stories

  • #3
    Lydia Davis
    “I looked like a woman in glasses, but I had dreams of leading a very different kind of life, the life of a woman who would not wear glasses, the kind of woman I saw from a distance now and then in a bar.”
    Lydia Davis, The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis

  • #4
    Jill McCorkle
    “If a nuclear disaster occurred, and you had to live out those final painful days just stretched out somewhere thinking about your life--This is who I am. This is what I love. This is what I believe--who would you want hearing your whispers? Or perhaps better: Who do you trust to hear your whispers? Whose breath do you want mingled with your own? Whose flesh still warm beside you?”
    Jill McCorkle

  • #5
    Amy Hempel
    “There’s so much I can’t read because I get so exasperated. Someone starts describing the character boarding the plane and pulling the seat back. And I just want to say, Babe, I have been downtown. I have been up in a plane. Give me some credit.”
    Amy Hempel

  • #6
    Alice McDermott
    “I suppose I've never set out to write a novel in which nothing happens . . . only to write a novel about the lives of certain characters. That nothing 'happens' in their lives is beside the point to me; I'm still interested in how they live, and think, and speak, and make some sense of their own experience. Incident (in novels and in life) is momentary, and temporary, but the memory of an incident, the story told about it, the meaning it takes on or loses over time, is lifelong and fluid, and that's what interests me and what I hope will prove interesting to readers. We're deluged with stories of things that have happened, events, circumstances, actions, etc. We need some stories that reveal how we think and feel and hope and dream. ”
    Alice McDermott

  • #7
    Don DeLillo
    “I don't want to do the type of writing where I recite biography, parentage and education. I want to rise up from the words on the page and do something, hurt someone.”
    Don DeLillo, Cosmopolis

  • #8
    James Salter
    “Women fall in love when they get to know you. Men are just the opposite. When they finally know you they're ready to leave”
    James Salter, Dusk and Other Stories

  • #9
    Eudora Welty
    “I am a writer who came from a sheltered life. A sheltered life can be a daring life as well. For all serious daring starts from within.”
    Eudora Welty, On Writing

  • #10
    Andre Dubus
    “I love short stories because I believe they are the way we live. They are what our friends tell us, in their pain and joy, their passion and rage, their yearning and their cry against injustice.”
    Andre Dubus

  • #11
    Jamaica Kincaid
    “This way of behaving, this way of feeling, so hysterical, so sad, when someone has died, I don't like at all and would like to avoid. It's not as if the whole thing has not happened before, it's not as if people have not been dying all along and each person left behind is the first person ever left behind in the world. What to make of it? Why can’t everybody just get used to it? People are born and they just can’t go on and on, but it is so hard, so hard for the people left behind; it’s so hard to see them go, as if it had never happened before, and so hard it could not happen to anyone else, no one but you could survive this kind of loss, seeing someone go, seeing them leave you behind; you don't want to go with them, you only don't want them to go.”
    Jamaica Kincaid, My Brother
    tags: death

  • #12
    Mary Gaitskill
    “Dani said this woman, with whom she’d lived for two years, had never known her. “I feel like people accept the first thing I show them,” she said, “and that’s all I ever am to them.”
    Mary Gaitskill, Don't Cry

  • #13
    Grace Paley
    “There is a long time in me between knowing and telling.”
    Grace Paley, Enormous Changes at the Last Minute: Stories

  • #14
    Nadine Gordimer
    “What is the purpose of writing? For me personally, it is really to explain the mystery of life, and the mystery of life includes, of course, the personal, the political, the forces that make us what we are while there's another force from inside battling to make us something else.”
    Nadine Gordimer

  • #15
    Grace Paley
    “My language limitations here are real. My vocabulary is adequate for writing notes and keeping journals but absolutely useless for an active moral life. If I really knew this language, there would surely be in my head, as there is in Webster's or the Dictionary of American Slang, that unreducible verb designed to tell a person like me what to do next.”
    Grace Paley, Enormous Changes at the Last Minute: Stories

  • #16
    Flannery O'Connor
    “I once received a letter from an old lady in California who informed me that when the tired reader comes home at night, he wishes to read something that will lift up his heart. And it seems her heart had not been lifted up by anything of mine she had read. I think that if her heart had been in the right place, it would have been lifted up.”
    Flannery O'Connor

  • #17
    Lydia Davis
    “We all have an ongoing narrative inside our heads, the narrative that is spoken aloud if a friend asks a question. That narrative feels deeply natural to me. We also hang on to scraps of dialogue. Our memories don’t usually serve us up whole scenes complete with dialogue. So I suppose I’m saying that I like to work from what a character is likely to remember, from a more interior place.”
    Lydia Davis

  • #18
    Margaret Atwood
    “A word after a word after a word is power.”
    Margaret Atwood

  • #19
    David  Mitchell
    “A half-read book is a half-finished love affair.”
    David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas

  • #20
    Barry Lopez
    “Everything is held together with stories. That is all that is holding us together, stories and compassion.”
    Barry Lopez



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