Bicky > Bicky's Quotes

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  • #1
    “When a book, any sort of book, reaches a certain intensity of artistic performance, it becomes literature. That intensity may be a matter of style, situation, character, emotional tone, or idea, or half a dozen other things. It may also be a perfection of control over the movement of a story similar to the control a great pitcher has over the ball. That is to me what you have more than anything else and more than anyone else. . . .
    The character that lasts is an ordinary guy with some extraordi-nary qualities. Perry Mason is the perfect detective because he has the intellectual approach of the juridical mind and at the same time the restless quality of the adventurer who won’t stay put. I think he is just about perfect. So let’s not have any more of that phooey about
    “as literature my stuff still stinks.” Who says so—William Dean Howells?

    Raymond Chandler to Erle Stanley Gardner, 1946”
    Richard B. Schwartz, Nice and Noir: Contemporary American Crime Fiction

  • #2
    Stephen Hunter
    “Because I'm too old for tragedy. I like a nice happy ending too.”
    Stephen Hunter, Point of Impact

  • #3
    Craig Rice
    “Everything, he decided, was almost unbearably sad. Life was wonderful, but nobody seemed to know what to do with it, and the world was beautiful, but nobody looked at it except tourists.”
    Craig Rice, Trial by Fury

  • #4
    Michael    Connelly
    “from the short story, Cielo Azul

    “Harry, get an ambulance.”

    I stood up and stepped back from the scene. I felt my chest growing tight, a clarity of thought coming over me. In all my years I had spoken for the dead many times. I had avenged the dead. I was at home with the dead. But I had never so clearly had a part in pulling someone away from the outstretched hands of death.

    And in that moment I knew we had done just that. And I knew that whatever happened afterward and wherever my life took me, I would always have this moment, that it would be a light that could lead me out of the darkest of tunnels.”
    Michael Connelly, Suicide Run

  • #5
    “A born detective never needs to be told that everybody lies – he or she has always known it.”
    Peter Grainger, Time and Tide

  • #6
    “The Lord of the Rings is a million times more interesting than mere literature, which is why mere literary critics cannot get to grips with it.”
    Robert McNeil

  • #7
    Robert Silverberg
    “They were wise in their own skills, but most of them seemed to think that that made them wise in everything, which did not appear to be the case.”
    Robert Silverberg, Enter a Soldier. Later: Enter Another

  • #8
    Douglas Adams
    “The major problem—one of the major problems, for there are several—one of the many major problems with governing people is that of whom you get to do it; or rather of who manages to get people to let them do it to them.
    To summarize: it is a well-known fact that those people who must want to rule people are, ipso facto, those least suited to do it.
    To summarize the summary: anyone who is capable of getting themselves made President should on no account be allowed to do the job.”
    Douglas Adams, The Restaurant at the End of the Universe

  • #9
    Harlan Coben
    “America was waking up, as Germany once did, to the awareness that one-third of our people will kill one-third of our people while one-third of our people watches.”
    Harlan Coben, The Boy from the Woods

  • #10
    Dan Simmons
    “In twentieth-century Old Earth, a fast food chain took dead cow meat, fried it in grease, added carcinogens, wrapped it in petroleum-based foam, and sold nine hundred billion units. Human beings. Go figure.”
    Dan Simmons, Hyperion

  • #11
    Andrzej Sapkowski
    “Our world is in equilibrium. The annihilation, the killing, of any creatures that inhabit this world upsets that equilibrium. And a lack of equilibrium brings closer extinction; extinction and the end of the world as we know it.”
    Andrzej Sapkowski, Sword of Destiny



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