Most places we leave in childhood grow less, not more, fancy.
John Irving, In One Person.
“Don't forget this, too: Rumors aren't interested in the unsensational story; rumors don't care what's true.”
“It doesn't really matter who said it - it's so obviously true. Bevore you can write anything, you have to notice something.”
“The time to read Madame Bovary is when your romantic hopes and desires have crashed, and you will believe that your future relationships will have disappointing - even devastating - consequences.”
“You can learn a lot from your lovers, but-for the most part-you get to keep your friends longer, and you learn more from them.”
“Never trust a man with a lunatic wife in an attic," Richard told me. "And anyone named Heathcliff should make you suspicious.”
“You can't possibly know that you're going to be a writer!" Miss Frost said. "It's not a career choice.”
“In a universe where all life is in movement, where ever fact seen in perspective is totally engaging, we impose stillness on lively young bodies, distort reality to dullness, make action drudgery. ...”
“If only she could be so oblivious again, to feel such love without knowing it, mistaking it for laughter. ”
“When you're a kid all you know is that your dad puts on his suit or overalls and vanishes from your life until nightfall. Sometimes my pops came back exhausted and scarlet-eyed, as if he'd been eng...”
“Don't just stand there and nod. The mind observes and cogitates, the heart engages, and I would encourage you to engage with the process.”
“The necessary and needful reaction from the collective unconscious expresses itself in archetypally formed ideas. The meeting with oneself is, at first, the meeting with one's own shadow. The shado...”
“The unconscious no sooner touches us than we are itwe become unconscious of ourselves. That is the age-old danger, instinctively known and feared by primitive man, who himself stands so very close ...”