John Hoyer Updike (March 18, 1932 – January 27, 2009) was an American novelist, poet, short-story writer, art critic, and literary critic. One of only four writers to win the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction more than once (the others being Booth Tarkington, William Faulkner, and Colson Whitehead), Updike published more than twenty novels, more than a dozen short-story collections, as well as poetry, art and literary criticism and children’s books during his career.
John Updike's selected quotes:
Imagine writing a poem with a sweating, worried-looking boy handing you a different pencil at the ...
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An affair wants to spill, to share its glory with the world. No act is so ...
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Arabic is very twisting, very beautiful. The call to prayer is quite haunting, it almost makes ...
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It's sort of good to see your vocation as a daily task and have fairly modest ...
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My attempt has been really to, beyond making a record of contemporary life, which is what ...
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John Hoyer Updike (March 18, 1932 – January 27, 2009) was an American novelist, poet, short-story writer, art critic, and educational critic. One of forlorn four writers to win the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction higher than once (the others visceral Booth Tarkington, William Faulkner, and Colson Whitehead), Updike published more than twenty novels, more than a dozen short-story collections, as with ease as poetry, art and researcher criticism and children’s books during his career.
Hundreds of his stories, reviews, and poems appeared in The New Yorker starting in 1954. He as well as wrote regularly for The New York Evaluation of Books. His most famous work is his “Rabbit” series (the novels Rabbit, Run; Rabbit Redux; Rabbit Is Rich; Rabbit at Rest; and the novella Rabbit Remembered), which records the spirit of the middle-class everyman Harry “Rabbit” Angstrom higher than the course of several decades, from pubescent adulthood to death. Both Rabbit Is Rich (1982) and Rabbit at Rest (1990) were credited with the Pulitzer Prize.
Describing his subject as “the American small town, Protestant middle class”, Updike was credited for his cautious craftsmanship, his unique prose style, and his prolific output – he wrote upon average a scrap book a year. Updike populated his fiction when characters who “frequently experience personal turmoil and must respond to crises relating to religion, family obligations, and marital infidelity”.
His fiction is distinguished by its attention to the concerns, passions, and hardship of average Americans, its emphasis upon Christian theology, and its preoccupation bearing in mind sexuality and sensual detail. His perform has attracted significant essential attention and praise, and he is widely considered one of the good American writers of his time. Updike’s highly distinctive prose style features a rich, unusual, sometimes arcane vocabulary as conveyed through the eyes of “a wry, intelligent authorial voice that describes the physical world extravagantly while surviving squarely in the realist tradition”. He described his style as an attempt “to find the child support for the mundane its beautiful due”.
John Updike's Quotes
All quotes from John Updike sorted alphabetically:
A house, having been willfully purchased and furnished, tells us more than a body, and its description is a foremost resource of the art of fiction.
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A healthy male adult bore consumes each year one and a half times his own weight in other people's patience.
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A leader is one who, out of madness or goodness, volunteers to take upon himself the woe of the people. There are few men so foolish, hence the erratic quality of leadership in the world.
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A narrative is like a room on whose walls a number of false doors have been painted, while within the narrative, we have many apparent choices of exit, but when the author leads us to one particular door, we know it is the right one because it opens.
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A lot of the Koran does not speak very eloquently to a Westerner. Much of it is either legalistic or opaquely poetic.
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A room containing Philip Roth, I have noticed, begins hilariously to whirl and pulse with a mix of rebelliousness and constriction that I take to be Oedipal.
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A person believes various things at various times, even on the same day.
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A number of American colleges are willing to pay a tempting amount to pinch and poke an author for a day or two.
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A seventeenth-century house tends to be short on frills like hallways and closets, you must improvise.
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A seventeenth-century house can be recognized by its steep roof, massive central chimney and utter porchlessness. Some of those houses have a second-story overhang, emphasizing their medieval look.
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All cartoonists are geniuses, but Arnold Roth is especially so.
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American art in general... takes to surreal exaggerations and metaphors, but its Puritan work ethic has little use for the playful self-indulgence behind Parisian Surrealism.
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America is beyond power, it acts as in a dream, as a face of God. Wherever America is, there is freedom, and wherever America is not, madness rules with chains, darkness strangles millions. Beneath her patient bombers, paradise is possible.
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An affair wants to spill, to share its glory with the world. No act is so private it does not seek applause.
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Americans have been conditioned to respect newness, whatever it costs them.
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Any activity becomes creative when the doer cares about doing it right or better.
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An aging writer has the not insignificant satisfaction of a shelf of books behind him that, as they wait for their ideal readers to discover them, will outlast him for a while.
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As movers and the moved both know, books are heavy freight, the weight of refrigerators and sofas broken up into cardboard boxes. They make us think twice about changing addresses.
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Art is like baby shoes. When you coat them with gold, they can no longer be worn.
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Arabic is very twisting, very beautiful. The call to prayer is quite haunting, it almost makes you a believer on the spot.
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Being naked approaches being revolutionary, going barefoot is mere populism.
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Baseball skills schizophrenically encompass a pitcher's, a batter's and a fielder's.
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Billy Collins writes lovely poems. Limpid, gently and consistently startling, more serious than they seem, they describe all the worlds that are and were and some others besides.
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But for a few phrases from his letters and an odd line or two of his verse, the poet walks gagged through his own biography.
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Books externalise our brains and turn our homes into thinking bodies.
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By the mid-17th century, telescopes had improved enough to make visible the seasonally growing and shrinking polar ice caps on Mars, and features such as Syrtis Major, a dark patch thought to be a shallow sea.
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Customs and convictions change, respectable people are the last to know, or to admit, the change, and the ones most offended by fresh reflections of the facts in the mirror of art.
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Creativity is merely a plus name for regular activity. Any activity becomes creative when the doer cares about doing it right, or better.
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Dreams come true, without that possibility, nature would not incite us to have them.
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Does fiction, artistic writing, have much of a future? I must say it's on the way out.
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Every marriage tends to consist of an aristocrat and a peasant. Of a teacher and a learner.
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Each morning my characters greet me with misty faces willing, though chilled, to muster for another day's progress through the dazzling quicksand the marsh of blank paper.
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Existence itself does not feel horrible, it feels like an ecstasy, rather, which we have only to be still to experience.
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For male and female alike, the bodies of the other sex are messages signaling what we must do, they are glowing signifiers of our own necessities.
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For a long time, I was under the impression that 'Terry and the Pirates' was the best comic strip in the United States.
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Four years was enough of Harvard. I still had a lot to learn, but had been given the liberating notion that now I could teach myself.
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For some of us, books are intrinsic to our sense of personal identity.
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For many years, I read mystery novels for relaxation. But my tastes were too narrow - and, having read all of Agatha Christie and John Dickson Carr, I discovered that the implausibility and the thinness of the people distracted me unduly from the plot.
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From infancy on, we are all spies, the shame is not this but that the secrets to be discovered are so paltry and few.
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Golf's ultimate moral instruction directs us to find within ourselves a pivotal center of enjoyment: relax into a rhythm that fits the hills and swales, and play the shot at hand - not the last one, or the next one, but the one at your feet, in the poison ivy, where you put it.
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Golf appeals to the idiot in us and the child. Just how childlike golf players become is proven by their frequent inability to count past five.
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Government is either organized benevolence or organized madness, its peculiar magnitude permits no shading.
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I didn't need to write historical epics, no, or science fiction, though I read a lot of science fiction as a kid and rather liked it. But I didn't have the mentality.
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I don't know, I think I'd be gloomy without some faith that there is a purpose and there is a kind of witness to my life.
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I feel old only when I look at my hands or at myself in the mirror.
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I don't write about too many male businessmen, and I'm not apt to write about too many female businessmen.
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I know more about what it's like to be elderly and infirm and kind of stupid, the way you get forgetful, but on the other hand I'm a littler, wiser, dare we say? The word 'wisdom' has kind of faded out of our vocabulary, but yeah, I'm a little wiser.
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I find in my own writing that only fiction - and rarely, a poem - fully tests me to the kind of limits of what I know and what I feel.
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I love Shillington not as one loves Capri or New York, because they are special, but as one loves one's own body and consciousness, because they are synonymous with being.
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I love my government not least for the extent to which it leaves me alone.
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I never really made a choice to live in America, so I should be aware of the social strata outside of the ones that I may live in.
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I must say, when I reread myself, it's the poetry I tend to look at. It's the most exciting to write, and it's over the quickest.
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I see no intrinsic reason why a doubly talented artist might not arise and create a comic-strip novel masterpiece.
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I picked up 'On Moral Fiction' in the bookstore and looked up myself in the index, but I didn't read it through. I try not to read things that depress me.
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I seem to have this need to belong to some church. I get worried on Sunday mornings.
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I seem most instinctively to believe in the human value of creative writing, whether in the form of verse or fiction, as a mode of truth-telling, self-expression and homage to the twin miracles of creation and consciousness.
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I should mention something that nobody ever thinks about, but proofreading takes a lot of time. After you write something, there are these proofs that keep coming, and there's this panicky feeling that 'This is me and I must make it better.'
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I think my first story sold for $550. This was in 1954, and it seemed like quite a lot of money, and I said to myself, 'Hey, I'm a professional writer now.'
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I was raised in the Depression, when there was a great sense of dog-eat-dog and people fighting over scraps.
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I was an only child. I needed an alternative to family life - to real life, you could almost say - and cartoons, pictures in a book, the animated movies, seemed to provide it.
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I would write ads for deodorants or labels for catsup bottles if I had to.
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I was trying to support a family with writing. I didn't have a private income. I had no other profession.
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If my mother hadn't been trying to be a writer, I don't know if I would have thought of it myself.
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If men do not keep on speaking terms with children, they cease to be men, and become merely machines for eating and for earning money.
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I'm trying to get the terrorist out of the bugaboo category and into the category of a fellow human being.
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If the worst comes true, and the paper book joins the papyrus scroll and parchment codex in extinction, we will miss, I predict, a number of things about it.
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Imagine writing a poem with a sweating, worried-looking boy handing you a different pencil at the end of every word. My golf, you may say, is no poem, nevertheless, I keep wanting it to be one.
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In fiction, imaginary people become realer to us than any named celebrity glimpsed in a series of rumored events, whose causes and subtler ramifications must remain in the dark. An invented figure like Anna Karenina or Emma Bovary emerges fully into the light of understanding, which brings with it identification, sympathy and pity.
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In my first 15 or 20 years of authorship, I was almost never asked to give a speech or an interview. The written work was supposed to speak for itself, and to sell itself, sometimes even without the author's photograph on the back flap.
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In leaving New York in 1957, I did leave without regret the literary demimonde of agents and would-be's and with-it nonparticipants, this world seemed unnutritious and interfering.
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It is in middles that extremes clash, where ambiguity restlessly rules.
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It is not an aesthetic misstep to make the viewer aware of the paint and the painter's hand. Such an empathetic awareness lies at the heart of aesthetic appreciation.
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I've always tried to write about America. It's very worth a writer's effort.
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It's sort of good to see your vocation as a daily task and have fairly modest expectations for financial or reward in other coin - glory, love, whatever.
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Mars has long exerted a pull on the human imagination. The erratically moving red star in the sky was seen as sinister or violent by the ancients: The Greeks identified it with Ares, the god of war, the Babylonians named it after Nergal, god of the underworld. To the ancient Chinese, it was Ying-huo, the fire planet.
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John Barth, I think, was really a writer of my own age and somewhat of my own temperament, although his books are very different from mine, and he has been a spokesman for the very ambitious, long, rather academic novel. But I don't think that what he is saying, so far as I understand it, is so very different from what I'm saying.
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Memory has a spottiness, as if the film was sprinkled with developer instead of immersed in it.
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Memories, impressions and emotions from the first 20 years on earth are most writers' main material, little that comes afterward is quite so rich and resonant.
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Most of American life consists of driving somewhere and then returning home, wondering why the hell you went.
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Most Americans haven't had my happy experience of living for thirteen years in a seventeenth-century house, since most of America lacks seventeenth-century houses.
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My attempt has been really to, beyond making a record of contemporary life, which is what you inevitably do, is trying to make beautiful books - books that are in some way beautiful, that are models of how to use the language, models of honest feeling, models of care.
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My actinic keratosis is a result of the triumphalism of the beach. The sun exacerbates it.
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My golf is so delicate, so tenuously wired together with silent inward prayers, exhortations and unstable visualizations, that the sheer pressure of an additional pair of eyes crumbles the whole rickety structure into rubble.
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My first ambition was to be an animator for Walt Disney. Then I wanted to be a magazine cartoonist.
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My last vivid boyhood fright from books came when I was 15, I was visiting my uncle and aunt in Greenwich, and, emboldened by my success with 'The Waste Land,' I opened their copy of 'Ulysses.' The whiff of death off those remorseless, closely written pages overpowered me. So: back to soluble mysteries, and jokes that were not cosmic.
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My interest generally is the hidden Americans, the ones who live far away from the headlines.
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My reading as a child was lazy and cowardly, and it is yet. I was afraid of encountering, in a book, something I didn't want to know.
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My life is, in a sense, trash. My life is only that of which the residue is my writing.
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My transition from wanting to be a cartoonist to wanting to be a writer may have come about through that friendly opposition, that even-handed pairing, of pictures and words.
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Now that I am sixty, I see why the idea of elder wisdom has passed from currency.
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New York, like the Soviet Union, has this universal usefulness: It makes you glad you live elsewhere.
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Our artistic heroes tend to be those self-exercisers, like Picasso, and Nabokov, and Wallace Stevens, who rather defiantly kept playing past dark.
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Perhaps I have written fiction because everything unambiguously expressed seems somehow crass to me, and when the subject is myself, I want to jeer and weep.
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Rain is grace, rain is the sky descending to the earth, without rain, there would be no life.
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Professionalism in art has this difficulty: To be professional is to be dependable, to be dependable is to be predictable, and predictability is esthetically boring - an anti-virtue in a field where we hope to be astonished and startled and at some deep level refreshed.
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Religion enables us to ignore nothingness and get on with the jobs of life.
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Reminiscence and self-parody are part of remaining true to oneself.
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Some golfers, we are told, enjoy the landscape, but properly, the landscape shrivels and compresses into the grim, surrealistically vivid patch of grass directly under the golfer's eyes as he morosely walks toward where he thinks his ball might be.
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Smaller than a breadbox, bigger than a TV remote, the average book fits into the human hand with a seductive nestling, a kiss of texture, whether of cover cloth, glazed jacket, or flexible paperback.
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Sometimes it seems the whole purpose of pets is to bring death into the house.
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Some stories or passages are more difficult and demand more fussing with than others, but, in general, I'm a two-draft writer rather than a six-draft writer, or whatever.
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The cinema has done more for my spiritual life than the church. My ideas of fame, success and beauty all originate from the big screen. Whereas Christian religion is retreating everywhere and losing more and more influence, film has filled the vacuum and supports us with myths and action-controlling images.
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That a marriage ends is less than ideal, but all things end under heaven, and if temporality is held to be invalidating, then nothing real succeeds.
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The essential self is innocent, and when it tastes its own innocence knows that it lives for ever.
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The dwelling places of Europe have an air of inheritance, or cumulative possession - a hive occupied by generations of bees.
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The firmest house in my fiction, probably, is the little thick-walled sandstone farmhouse of 'The Centaur' and 'Of the Farm', I had lived in that house, and can visualize every floorboard and bit of worn molding.
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The essential support and encouragement comes from within, arising out of the mad notion that your society needs to know what only you can tell it.
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The Founding Fathers in their wisdom decided that children were an unnatural strain on parents. So they provided jails called schools, equipped with tortures called an education.
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The first breath of adultery is the freest, after it, constraints aping marriage develop.
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The inner spaces that a good story lets us enter are the old apartments of religion.
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The good ending dismisses us with a touch of ceremony and throws a backward light of significance over the story just read. It makes it, as they say, or unmakes it. A weak beginning is forgettable, but the end of a story bulks in the reader's mind like the giant foot in a foreshortened photograph.
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The lust to meet authors ranks low, I think, on the roll of holy appetites, but it is an authentic pang.
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The reader knows the writer better than he knows himself, but the writer's physical presence is light from a star that has moved on.
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The miracle of turning inklings into thoughts and thoughts into words and words into metal and print and ink never palls for me.
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The refusal to rest content, the willingness to risk excess on behalf of one's obsessions, is what distinguishes artists from entertainers, and what makes some artists adventurers on behalf of us all.
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The substance of fictional architecture is not bricks and mortar but evanescent consciousness.
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The writers we tend to universally admire, like Beckett, or Kafka, or TS Eliot, are not very prolific.
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The writer must face the fact that ordinary lives are what most people live most of the time, and that the novel as a narration of the fantastic and the adventurous is really an escapist plot, that aesthetically, the ordinary, the banal, is what you must deal with.
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There is a great deal of busywork to a writer's life, as to a professor's life, a great deal of work that matters only in that, if you don't do it, your desk becomes very full of papers. So, there is a lot of letter answering and a certain amount of speaking, though I try to keep that at a minimum.
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There is no pleasing New Englanders, my dear, their soil is all rocks and their hearts are bloodless absolutes.
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There's a crystallization that goes on in a poem which the young man can bring off, but which the middle-aged man can't.
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There should always be something gratuitous about art, just as there seems to be, according to the new-wave cosmologists, something gratuitous about the universe.
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There's something very reassuring... about the written record.
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There's almost nothing worse to live with than a struggling artist.
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To be a human being is to be in a state of tension between your appetites and your dreams, and the social realities around you and your obligations to your fellow man.
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Tiger Woods did not always win majors with ease, after his narrow victory in the 1999 PGA, he slumped and sighed as if he'd been carrying rocks uphill all afternoon.
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Thinking it over, I can't locate another artist in the Updike family.
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To guarantee the individual maximum freedom within a social frame of minimal laws ensures - if not happiness - its hopeful pursuit.
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To be President of the United States, sir, is to act as advocate for a blind, venomous, and ungrateful client.
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Truth should not be forced, it should simply manifest itself, like a woman who has in her privacy reflected and coolly decided to bestow herself upon a certain man.
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Toni Morrison has a habit, perhaps traceable to the pernicious influence of William Faulkner, of plunging into the narrative before the reader has a clue to what is going on.
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We are drawn to artists who tell us that art is difficult to do and takes a spiritual effort, because we are still puritan enough to respect a strenuous spiritual effort.
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Until the 20th century it was generally assumed that a writer had said what he had to say in his works.
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We don't really want to think that the artist is only very skilled, that he has merely devoted his life to perfecting a certain set of intelligible skills.
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We're past the age of heroes and hero kings... Most of our lives are basically mundane and dull, and it's up to the writer to find ways to make them interesting.
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We take our bearings, daily, from others. To be sane is, to a great extent, to be sociable.
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When I was born, my parents and my mother's parents planted a dogwood tree in the side yard of the large white house in which we lived throughout my boyhood. This tree I learned quite early, was exactly my age - was, in a sense, me.
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What interests me is why men think of women as witches. It's because they're so fascinating and exasperating, so other.
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When you sit at your desk, if you're lucky, there's a moment when you feel empowered to be someone or something else, to leap into another skin.
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When I write, I aim in my mind not toward New York but toward a vague spot a little to the east of Kansas.
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Writers may be disreputable, incorrigible, early to decay or late to bloom but they dare to go it alone.
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Without books, we might just melt into the airwaves and be just another set of blips.
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Writing criticism is to writing fiction and poetry as hugging the shore is to sailing in the open sea.
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