WRITING QUOTES III

quotations about writing

Writing quote

Before I write down one word, I have to have the character in my mind through and through. I must penetrate into the last wrinkle of his soul.

HENRIK IBSEN

letter to Munich editor Georg Conrad


I suffer as always from the fear of putting down the first line. It is amazing the terrors, the magics, the prayers, the straitening shyness that assail one. It is as though the words were not only indelible but that they spread out like dye in water and color everything around them. A strange and mystic business, writing.

JOHN STEINBECK

The Paris Review, fall 1975

Tags: John Steinbeck


With a practice of writing comes a certain important integrity. A culture filled with bloggers thinks differently about politics or public affairs, if only because more have been forced through the discipline of showing in writing why A leads to B.

LAWRENCE LESSIG

Remix: Making Art and Commerce Thrive in the Hybrid Economy

Tags: Lawrence Lessig


It is always vaunting, of course, to imagine yourself inside another person, but it is what a story writer does in every piece of work; it is his first step, and his last too, I suppose.

EUDORA WELTY

One Writer's Beginnings


Here's a news flash--writers are selfish people. Truth is, creative types like me are driven by one impulse--to make up a world in which we get to control everything and everyone. We decide who enters and who exits, what the weather will be, who will hook up with whom, who will win and who will lose. It makes us feel powerful and, in all honesty, has relatively little to do with thinking about what will make anyone else happy.

VICTORIA LAURIE

acknowledgements, What's A Ghoul to Do?

Tags: Victoria Laurie


I am not at all in a humor for writing; I must write on till I am.

JANE AUSTEN

letter to Cassandra Austen, October 26, 1813

Tags: Jane Austen


Metaphors get under your skin by ghosting right past the logical mind.

JANE HIRSHFIELD

"The Art of Metaphor"

Tags: Jane Hirshfield


A true piece of writing is a dangerous thing. It can change your life.

TOBIAS WOLFF

Old School


The author should die once he has finished writing. So as not to trouble the path of the text.

UMBERTO ECO

postscript, The Name of the Rose

Tags: Umberto Eco


To this day, if you ask me how I became a writer, I cannot give you an answer. To this day, if you ask me how a book is written, I cannot answer. For long periods, if I didn't know that somehow in the past I had written a book, I would have given up.

V. S. NAIPAUL

New York Times, April 24, 1994


I can remember discussing the effect of the typewriter on our work with Tom Eliot because he was moving to the typewriter about the same time I was. And I remember our agreeing that it made for a slight change of style in the prose -- that you tended to use more periodic sentences, a little shorter, and a rather choppier style -- and that one must be careful about that. Because, you see, you couldn't look ahead quite far enough, for you were always thinking about putting your fingers on the bloody keys. But that was a passing phase only. We both soon discovered that we were just as free to let the style throw itself into the air as we had been writing manually.

CONRAD AIKEN

interview, The Paris Review, winter-spring 1968


All you have to do is write one true sentence. Write the truest sentence you know.

ERNEST HEMINGWAY

A Moveable Feast

Tags: Ernest Hemingway


I seldom have a firm plot or any idea at all about the ending. But there is a clear, almost mathematically conceptual idea that determines length--the length or brevity of a literary work being comparable to the size of the frame needed by a picture.

HEINRICH BÖLL

The Paris Review, spring 1983


Irish English is a very different beast from English English or American English. Very different. The way in which Irish writers are only too happy to infuse their language with ambiguity is very different. An English writer will try to be clear. Orwell said that good prose should be like a pane of glass. The Irish writer would say: 'No no, it's a lens, it distorts everything.'

JOHN BANVILLE

"Oblique dreamer", The Guardian, September 17, 2000

Tags: John Banville


A double noose thou on thy neck dost pull
For writing treason and for writing dull.

JOHN DRYDEN

Absalom and Achitophel

Tags: John Dryden


Cautious men have many adverbs, "usually," "nearly," "almost ": safe men begin, " it may be advanced " : you never know precisely what their premises are, nor what their conclusion is; they go tremulously like a timid rider; they turn hither and thither; they do not go straight across a subject, like a masterly mind.

WALTER BAGEHOT

Literary Studies

Tags: Walter Bagehot


No writing has any real value which is not the expression of genuine thought and feeling.

ELEANOR ROOSEVELT

My Day

Tags: Eleanor Roosevelt


When I start to write, I don't have any plan at all. I just wait for the story to come. I don't choose what kind of story it is or what's going to happen. I just wait.

HARUKI MURAKAMI

Paris Review, summer 2004


Completing a book, it's a little like having a baby.... There's a feeling of relief and satisfaction when you get to the end. A feeling that you have brought your family, your characters, home. Then a sort of post-natal depression and then, very quickly, the horizon of a new book. The consolation that next time I will do it better.

JOHN LE CARRÉ

interview, The Telegraph, August 31, 2010


For a sentence is not complete unless each word, once its syllables have been pronounced, gives way to make room for the next.

ST. AUGUSTINE

Confessions

Tags: St. Augustine