Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
I was a violent, bipolar, compulsive liar. I was a real American.
Ben Lerner
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Ben Lerner
Age: 45
Born: 1979
Born: February 4
Essayist
Novelist
Poet
University Teacher
Writer
Topeka
Kansas
Violent
American
Real
Compulsive
Bipolar
Liar
Liars
More quotes by Ben Lerner
Henry James claim that if you want to be a novelist you should be somebody on whom nothing is lost.
Ben Lerner
I don't think it's always a sign of respect for persons (inside or outside of fiction) to pretend to be able to represent, to have access to, their multi-dimensionality at every moment. That doesn't imply people aren't multi-dimensional.
Ben Lerner
I usually see the word metafiction applied to works that draw attention to their own devices, their own artificiality, in order to mock novelistic convention and show the impossibility of capturing a reality external to the text or whatever.
Ben Lerner
Art has to offer something other than stylized despair.
Ben Lerner
I'm increasingly on the side of thinkers like David Graeber who are talking back to this notion of totality and emphasizing how there are all kinds of moments in our daily lives that break - or at least could break - from the logic of profit and the modes of domination it entails. Zones of freedom, even if it's never pure.
Ben Lerner
Maybe that's the way I'm private - I respect the privacy of my characters? Anyway, we're getting close to the whole relatability and likability thing.
Ben Lerner
The transpersonal is more awe-inspiring, more exciting than the thing we confuse it for.
Ben Lerner
Maggie Nelson cuts through our culture's prefabricated structures of thought and feeling with an intelligence whose ferocity is ultimately in the service of love. No piety is safe, no orthodoxy, no easy irony. The scare quotes burn off like fog.
Ben Lerner
I think that sexual pleasure and the weird color of the sky after a storm or the stream of tail lights across the bridge or the way silence can thin or thicken before music starts - all these things have to be harnessed by the political. The libidinal has to be harnessed by the political.
Ben Lerner
I like to think - knowing that it's an enabling fiction - of those moments as fragments from a world to come, a world where price isn't the only measure of value.
Ben Lerner
Few real people appear in my two novels, actually. Ari appears on the edge of this book a couple of times - but on the edge, she's never in it, even if she's a determining force from the outside. Everybody in the first book was basically made up, if never from scratch.
Ben Lerner
I wasn't aware I'd write the novel when I wrote the New Yorker story either. And the narration of their construction in 10:04 is fiction, however flickering.
Ben Lerner
What interests me about fiction is, in part, its flickering edge between realism and where a tear in the fabric of a story lets in some other sort of light.
Ben Lerner
Just in case God isn't dead, our astronauts carry sidearms.
Ben Lerner
I'm defending fiction as a human capacity more than as a popular or dying literary genre.
Ben Lerner
Fiction doesn't appeal to me because it can describe physical appearances exhaustively or because it can offer access to the inner depths of an array of human characters - neither that kind of realism of bodily surfaces nor of individual psychologies seems particularly realistic to me.
Ben Lerner
I think the parable is a peculiar way of saying that redemption is immanent whether or not it's imminent, that the world to come is in a sense always already here, if still unavailable. I find this idea powerful for several reasons. For one thing, it's an antidote to despair.
Ben Lerner
I don't think I'm going to publish this as fiction but I think I'm going to tell this story to a friend and then I start telling the story in my mind as the experience transpires as a way of pretending it's already happened.
Ben Lerner
I've been building a fiction in part around the Marfa poem since my brief residency there, which has kept it from receding into the past.
Ben Lerner
My concern is how we live fictions, how fictions have real effects, become facts in that sense, and how our experience of the world changes depending on its arrangement into one narrative or another.
Ben Lerner