Tiffany Madison  - Quotes

 [On Female Attraction to Men in Uniform] That male military persona feeds a subconscious, passive-aggressive female desire to dominate the warrior as he is perceived an iconic example of masculinity (particularly amongst traditionally warlike cultures). The damsel in distress theme always struck me as embodying this: the hapless, innocently beautiful woman unwittingly enraptures the heroic male so completely that he would risk all to submit to her at his own peril, and quite in spite of it. 

Tags: damsel   literature   warrior     


William Shakespeare  - Quotes

 Lord Polonius: What do you read, my lord?

Hamlet: Words, words, words.

Lord Polonius: What is the matter, my lord?

Hamlet: Between who?

Lord Polonius: I mean, the matter that you read, my lord.
 

Tags: hamlet   literature   shakespeare     
Vladimir Nabokov  - Quotes

 A wise reader reads the book of genius not with his heart, not so much with his brain, but with his spine. It is there that occurs the telltale tingle... 

Tags: literature   nabokov   quote   reader   reading     


Stephen Fry  - Quotes

 It's not all bad. Heightened self-consciousness, apartness, an inability to join in, physical shame and self-loathing 

Tags: depression   insecurity   isolation   language   laughter   literature   philosophy   shame     
Christopher Hitchens  - Quotes

 The Postmodernists' tyranny wears people down by boredom and semi-literate prose. 

Tags: humor   literature   postmodernism     
Adventureland  - Quotes

 Sue O'Malley:
What are you majoring in?
Joel:
Russian literature and Slavic languages.
Sue O'Malley:
Oh wow, that's pretty interesting. What career track is that?
Joel:
Cabby, hot dog vendor, marijuana delivery guy. The world is my oyster.
 

Roman Payne  - Quotes

 All forms of madness, bizarre habits, awkwardness in society, general clumsiness, are justified in the person who creates good art. 

Tags: artists   awkwardness   bizarre   clumsiness   literature   madness   strangeness   weird     
Roman Payne  - Quotes

 Apollinaire said a poet should be 'of his time.' I say objects of the Digital Age belong in newspapers, not literature. When I read a novel, I don 

Tags: apollinaire   cash   gold   literature   modernity   money   newspapers   technology   writing     
Toni Morrison  - Quotes

 Black literature is taught as sociology, as tolerance, not as a serious, rigorous art form. 

Tags: black   literature   sociology     
Jonathan Ames  - Quotes

 People don't expect too much from literature. They just want to know they're not alone with being confused. 

Tags: confusion   literature   reading     
Laura Bush  - Quotes

 There is nothing political about American literature. 

Tags: dumb   literature   politics   reading     
The Broken Hearts Club: A Romantic Comedy  - Quotes

 Howie:
Dumb gorgeous people should not be allowed to use literature when competing in the pickup pool. It's like bald people wearing hats... it's deceiving.
 

Leo Tolstoy  - Quotes

 Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way. 

Tags: literature   tolstoy     
Oscar Wilde  - Quotes

 But what is the difference between literature and journalism?

...Journalism is unreadable and literature is not read. That is all.

 

Tags: journalism   literature   oscar   wilde     
Aaron Eckhart  - Quotes

 The  

Tags: artistic   creativity   equations   gifts   ideas   inspiration   literature   math   mathematical   mathematics   muse   muses   mysteries   mystery   payne   sleep   sleeping   waking     
Orhan Pamuk  - Quotes

 Ist nicht eigentliches Ziel von Roman und Museum, unsere Erinnerungen so aufrichtig wie m 

Tags: fortune   literature   memories   museum     
Christopher Hitchens  - Quotes

 When the Washington Post telephoned me at home on Valentine's Day 1989 to ask my opinion about the Ayatollah Khomeini's fatwah, I felt at once that here was something that completely committed me. It was, if I can phrase it like this, a matter of everything I hated versus everything I loved. In the hate column: dictatorship, religion, stupidity, demagogy, censorship, bullying, and intimidation. In the love column: literature, irony, humor, the individual, and the defense of free expression. Plus, of course, friendship 

Tags: atheism   bastille   bullying   censorship   demagogy   dictatorship   enlightenment   fascism   fatwa   friendship   hate   humor   individualism   intimidation   iran   irony   khomeini   literature   love   principles   religion   rushdie   stupidity   theocracy     
Christopher Hitchens  - Quotes

 It was as easy as breathing to go and have tea near the place where Jane Austen had so wittily scribbled and so painfully died. One of the things that causes some critics to marvel at Miss Austen is the laconic way in which, as a daughter of the epoch that saw the Napoleonic Wars, she contrives like a Greek dramatist to keep it off the stage while she concentrates on the human factor. I think this comes close to affectation on the part of some of her admirers. Captain Frederick Wentworth in Persuasion, for example, is partly of interest to the female sex because of the 'prize' loot he has extracted from his encounters with Bonaparte's navy. Still, as one born after Hiroshima I can testify that a small Hampshire township, however large the number of names of the fallen on its village-green war memorial, is more than a world away from any unpleasantness on the European mainland or the high or narrow seas that lie between. (I used to love the detail that Hampshire's 'New Forest' is so called because it was only planted for the hunt in the late eleventh century.) I remember watching with my father and brother through the fence of Stanstead House, the Sussex mansion of the Earl of Bessborough, one evening in the early 1960s, and seeing an immense golden meadow carpeted entirely by grazing rabbits. I'll never keep that quiet, or be that still, again.



This was around the time of countrywide protest against the introduction of a horrible laboratory-confected disease, named 'myxomatosis,' into the warrens of old England to keep down the number of nibbling rodents. Richard Adams's lapine masterpiece Watership Down is the remarkable work that it is, not merely because it evokes the world of hedgerows and chalk-downs and streams and spinneys better than anything since The Wind in the Willows, but because it is only really possible to imagine gassing and massacre and organized cruelty on this ancient and green and gently rounded landscape if it is organized and carried out against herbivores.
 

Tags: 1960s   countryside   cruelty   england   europe   gassing   hampshire   hiroshima   literature   mansions   massacre   meadow   myxomatosis   napoleon   quiet   rabbits   silence   sussex   townships   women     
Clarice Lispector  - Quotes

 Ela acreditava em anjo e, porque acreditava, eles existiam 

Tags: angels   believe   dream   literature     
Jane Austen  - Quotes

 Nobody could catch cold by the sea; nobody wanted appetite by the sea; nobody wanted spirits; nobody wanted strength. Sea air was healing, softening, relaxing -- fortifying and bracing -- seemingly just as was wanted -- sometimes one, sometimes the other. If the sea breeze failed, the seabath was the certain corrective; and where bathing disagreed, the sea air alone was evidently designed by nature for the cure. 

Tags: classics   literature   satire     
Martin Gardner  - Quotes

 Her constant orders for beheading are shocking to those modern critics of children's literature who feel that juvenile fiction should be free of all violence and especially violence with Freudian undertones. Even the Oz books of L. Frank Baum, so singularly free of the horrors to be found in Grimm and Andersen, contain many scenes of decapitation. As far as I know, there have been no empirical studies of how children react to such scenes and what harm if any is done to their psyche. My guess is that the normal child finds it all very amusing and is not damaged in the least, but that books like Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and The Wizard of Oz should not be allowed to circulate indiscriminately among adults who are undergoing analysis. 

Tags: beheading   children   death   literature   media   reading     
Virginia Woolf  - Quotes

 About here, she thought, dabbling her fingers in the water, a ship had sunk, and she muttered, dreamily half asleep, how we perished, each alone. 

Tags: death   literature     
Ashley Tisdale  - Quotes

 Mas, n 

Tags: literature     
Roman Payne  - Quotes

 I will always know the glory of the beautiful and rare, as they will know security from labour and prayer. As they will hear the laughter of the children they gave life, I will know the torments of the song born under knife. 

Tags: artists   creation   creativity   literature   writers     
Kingsley Amis  - Quotes

 Dixon was alive again. Consciousness was upon him before he could get out of the way; not for him the slow, gracious wandering from the halls of sleep, but a summary, forcible ejection. He lay sprawled, too wicked to move, spewed up like a broken spider-crab on the tarry shingle of morning. The light did him harm, but not as much as looking at things did; he resolved, having done it once, never to move his eyeballs again. A dusty thudding in his head made the scene before him beat like a pulse. His mouth had been used as a latrine by some small creature of the night, and then as its mausoleum. During the night, too, he'd somehow been on a cross-country run and then been expertly beaten up by secret police. He felt bad. 

Tags: alcohol   hangover   humor   literature     
Oscar Wilde  - Quotes

 To give an accurate description of what has never occurred is not merely the proper occupation of the historian, but the inalienable privilege of any man of parts and culture. 

Tags: culture   historians   literature     
Kathryn Davis  - Quotes

 Two adolescent girls on a hot summer night--hardly the material of great literature, which tends to endow all male experience (that of those twin brothers who found themselves adrift so many years ago in the dark northern woods for instance) with universal radiance. Faithless sons, wars and typhoons, fields of blood, greed and knives: our literature's full of such stories. And yet suppose for an instant that it wasn't the complacent father but his bored daughter who was the Prime Mover; suppose that what came first wasn't an appetite for drama but the urge to awaken it. Mightn't we then permit a single summer in the lives of two bored girls to represent an essential stage in the history of the universe? 

Tags: literature   patriarchy     
Pat Conroy  - Quotes

 The world of literature has everything in it, and it refuses to leave

anything out. I have read like a man on fire my whole life because the

genius of English teachers touched me with the dazzling beauty of language.

Because of them I rode with Don Quixote and danced with Anna Karenina at a

ball in St. Petersburg and lassoed a steer in
 

Tags: conroy   english   literature   reading   teachers     
Don DeLillo  - Quotes

 When I work, I'm just translating the world around me in what seems to be straightforward terms. For my readers, this is sometimes a vision that's not familiar. But I'm not trying to manipulate reality. This is just what I see and hear. 

Tags: familiarity   interpretation   literature   novels   readers   reading   realism   reality   translation   writing     
Patrick White  - Quotes

 As it is I'm a dated novelist, whom hardly anybody reads, or if they do, most of them don't understand what I am on about. Certainly I wish I had never written Voss, which is going to be everybody's albatross. 

Tags: literature   novelists   novels     
Dave Eggers  - Quotes

 The idea we came up with, well before we left, was something we coined Performance Literature. Excuse the use of that second word, because I realize it's presumptuous. Also, excuse the first word, and the term in general. 

Tags: apologies   literature     
Simone de Beauvoir  - Quotes

 When I was a child, when I was an adolescent, books saved me from despair: that convinced me that culture was the highest of values[...]. 

Tags: books   culture   literature     
John Milton  - Quotes

 Of four infernal rivers that disgorge/ Into the burning Lake their baleful streams;/Abhorred Styx the flood of deadly hate,/Sad Acheron of sorrow, black and deep;/Cocytus, nam'd of lamentation loud/ Heard on the rueful stream; fierce Phlegethon/ Whose waves of torrent fire inflame with rage./ Far off from these a slow and silent stream,/ Lethe the River of Oblivion rolls/ Her wat'ry Labyrinth whereof who drinks,/ Forthwith his former state and being forgets,/ Forgets both joy and grief, pleasure and pain. 

Tags: haunting   literature   pain   pleasure   rivers     
Don DeLillo  - Quotes

 It's my contention that each book creates its own structure and its own length. I've written three or four slim books. It may be that the next novel is a big one, but I don't know. 

Tags: books   literature   narrative   novels   writing     
Roman Payne  - Quotes

 I regained my soul through literature after those times I'd lost it to wild-eyed gypsy girls on the European streets. 

Tags: books   europe   fortune   fortunes   gypsies   gypsy   literature   payne   reading   roman   soul   streets     
Anthony Burgess  - Quotes

 Language exists less to record the actual than to liberate the imagination. 

Tags: burgess   literature   writing     
Kathy Acker  - Quotes

 Literature is that which denounces and slashes apart the repressing machine at the level of the signified. 

Tags: challenge   literature     
Jane Austen  - Quotes

 But I hate to hear you talking so like a fine gentleman, and as if women were all fine ladies, instead of rational creatures. We none of us expect to be in smooth water all our days. 

Tags: classics   literature   romance     
Terry Pratchett  - Quotes

 Stories of imagination tend to upset those without one. 

Tags: fantasy   humor   imagination   literature   stories     
Maya Angelou  - Quotes

 When I look back, I am so impressed again with the life-giving power of literature. If I were a young person today, trying to gain a sense of myself in the world, I would do that again by reading, just as I did when I was young. 

Tags: literature   reading   self   youth     
Joyce Carol Oates  - Quotes

 Literature, art, like civilization itself, are only accidents. 

Tags: accidents   literature     
Orson Scott Card  - Quotes

 We care about moral issues, nobility, decency, happiness, goodness 

Tags: fiction   literature   morality     
Wendell Berry  - Quotes

 Until modern times, we focused a great deal of the best of our thought upon rituals of return to the human condition. Seeking enlightenment or the Promised Land or the way home, a man would go or be forced to go into the wilderness, measure himself against the Creation, recognize finally his true place within it, and thus be saved both from pride and from despair. Seeing himself as a tiny member of a world he cannot comprehend or master or in any final sense possess, he cannot possibly think of himself as a god. And by the same token, since he shares in, depends upon, and is graced by all of which he is a part, neither can he become a fiend; he cannot descend into the final despair of destructiveness. Returning from the wilderness, he becomes a restorer of order, a preserver. He sees the truth, recognizes his true heir, honors his forebears and his heritage, and gives his blessing to his successors. He embodies the passing of human time, living and dying within the human limits of grief and joy.

(pg.95,
 

Tags: humanity   journey   literature   questions   truth     
Oscar Wilde  - Quotes

 It is a very sad thing that nowadays there is so little useless information. 

Tags: information   literature   little   wisdom     
J.M. Coetzee  - Quotes

 Von allen Abenteuern ist Selbstmord das literarischste, mehr noch als Mord. 

Tags: literature   murder   suicide     
Henry James  - Quotes

 Summer afternoon... to me those have always been the two most beautiful words in the English language. 

Tags: beauty   english   literature   summer     
Machado de Assis  - Quotes

 he best thing to do is to loosen my grip on my pen and let it go wandering about until it finds an entrance. There must be one  

Tags: creativity   literature   novels   writers   writing     
Aldous Huxley  - Quotes

 Every man's memory is his private literature. 

Tags: literature   memory     
Georges Bataille  - Quotes

 Though the immediate impression of rebellion may obscure the fact, the task of authentic literature is nevertheless only conceivable in terms of a desire for fundamental communication with the reader. 

Tags: communication   literature   reader   rebellion   writers   writing     
J.D. Salinger  - Quotes

 What really knocks me out is a book that, when you're all done reading it, you wish the author that wrote it was a terrific friend of yours and you could call him up on the phone whenever you felt like it. That doesn't happen much, though. 

Tags: authors   books   literature   reading   writing     
John Berryman  - Quotes

 I do strongly feel that among the greatest pieces of luck for high achievement is ordeal. Certain great artists can make out without it, Titian and others, but mostly you need ordeal. My idea is this: the artist is extremely lucky who is presented with the worst possible ordeal which will not actually kill him. At that point, he's in business: Beethoven's deafness, Goya's deafness, Milton's blindness, that kind of thing. 

Tags: artists   beethoven   goya   literature   luck   milton   ordeals   poetry   titian     
Machado de Assis  - Quotes

 The best thing to do is to loosen my grip on my pen and let it go wandering about until it finds an entrance. There must be one  

Tags: creativity   literature   novels   writers   writing     
Jane Austen  - Quotes

 They had no conversation together, no intercourse but what the commonest civility required. Once so much to each other! Now nothing! There had been a time, when of all the large party now filling the drawing-room at Uppercross, they would have found it most difficult to cease to speak to one another. With the exception, perhaps, of Admiral and Mrs. Croft, who seemed particularly attached and happy, (Anne could allow no other exception even among the married couples) there could have been no two hearts so open, no tastes so simliar, no feelings so in unison, no countenances so beloved. Now they were as strangers; nay, worse than strangers, for they could never become aquainted. It was a perpetual estrangement. 

Tags: classics   literature   romance     
Gene Wolfe  - Quotes

 My definition of good literature is that which can be read by an educated reader, and reread with increased pleasure. 

Tags: literature     
E.M. Forster  - Quotes

 How can the mind take hold of such a country? Generations of invaders have tried, but they remain in exile. The important towns they build are only retreats, their quarrels the malaise of men who cannot find their way home. India knows of their trouble. She knows of the whole world's trouble, to its uttermost depth. She calls  

Tags: india   literature   travel     
William Butler Yeats  - Quotes

 Hope and Memory have one daughter and her name is Art, and she has built her dwelling far from the desperate field where men hang out their garments upon forked boughs to be banners of battle. O beloved daughter of Hope and Memory, be with me for a while. 

Tags: hope   literature   memory   poetry     
Howard Nemerov  - Quotes

 Write what you know. That should leave you with a lot of free time. 

Tags: humor   knowledge   literature   writing     
Pierre Janet  - Quotes

 Martial (the main character of LOCUS SOLUS) has a very interesting conception of literary beauty: the work must contain nothing real, no observations about the world or the mind, nothing but completely imaginary constructions. These are in themselves ideas from an extrahuman world.

 

Tags: ideas   imagination   literature   mind   surrealism   writing     
Michael Richardson  - Quotes

 We can sum up the surrealist distinction between 'literature' and 'poetry' by saying where the former is artificial, fictive and elusive, the latter is natural, real, direct and spontaneous. 

Tags: literature   poetry   surrealism     
Corey Redekop  - Quotes

 Literature is a virus. 

Tags: fiction   literature   medicine     


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