Kafka Was the Rage Quotes

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Kafka Was the Rage: A Greenwich Village Memoir Kafka Was the Rage: A Greenwich Village Memoir by Anatole Broyard
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“Two people making love, she once said, are like one drowned person resuscitating the other.”
Anatole Broyard, Kafka Was the Rage: A Greenwich Village Memoir
“I realize that people still read books now and some people actually love them, but in 1946 in the Village our feelings about books--I’m talking about my friends and myself--went beyond love. It was as if we didn’t know where we ended and books began. Books were our weather, our environment, our clothing. We didn’t simply read books; we became them. We took them into ourselves and made them into our histories. While it would be easy to say that we escaped into books, it might be truer to say that books escaped into us. Books were to us what drugs were to young men in the sixties.

They showed us what was possible. We had been living with whatever was close at hand, whatever was given, and books took us great distances. We had known only domestic emotions and they showed us what happens to emotions when they are homeless. Books gave us balance--the young are so unbalanced that anything can make them fall. Books steadied us; it was as if we carried a heavy bag of them in each hand and they kept us level. They gave us gravity.”
Anatole Broyard, Kafka Was the Rage: A Greenwich Village Memoir
“When we were in bed, the only part of me she touched was my penis, because it was the most detached.”
Anatole Broyard, Kafka Was the Rage: A Greenwich Village Memoir
“I had conceived of lovemaking as a sort of asking and answering of questions, but with us it only led to further questions, until we seemed to be locked in a philosophical debate. Instead of the proverbial sadness after sex, I felt something like a semantic despair.”
Anatole Broyard, Kafka Was the Rage: A Greenwich Village Memoir
“When you look back over your life, the thing that amazes you most is your original capacity to believe. To grow older is to lose this capacity, to stop believing, or become unable to believe.”
Anatole Broyard, Kafka Was the Rage: A Greenwich Village Memoir
“What I brought to Dr. Schachtel was not a condition or a situation but a poetics. I wanted to discuss my life with him not as a patient talking to an analyst but as if we were two literary critics discussing a novel. Of course, that’s what all patients want, but the irony was that with me it might have worked. It might have been the shortest, or the only, way through my defenses, because I had a literature rather than a personality, a set of fictions about myself.”
Anatole Broyard, Kafka Was the Rage: A Greenwich Village Memoir
“espadrilles.”
Anatole Broyard, Kafka Was the Rage: A Greenwich Village Memoir
“It seemed to me that a penis was a very primitive instrument for dealing with life.”
Anatole Broyard, Kafka Was the Rage: A Greenwich Village Memoir