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One newspaper a day ought to be enough for anyone who still prefers to retain a little mental balance.
Clifton Fadiman
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Clifton Fadiman
Age: 95 †
Born: 1904
Born: May 15
Died: 1999
Died: June 20
Intellectual
Journalist
Literary Critic
Radio Personality
Television Presenter
Writer
Brooklyn
New York
Clifton Paul Fadiman
Anyone
Prefers
Stills
Retain
Still
Newspaper
Littles
Journalism
Little
Newspapers
Enough
Mental
Balance
Ought
More quotes by Clifton Fadiman
I tried to use the questions and answers as an armature on which to build a sculpture of genuine conversation
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My main recollection is of the work I had to do in order to eat
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Gertrude Stein was masterly in making nothing happen very slowly
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When you travel, remember that a foreign country is not designed to make you comfortable. It is designed to make its own people comfortable.
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Insomnia is a gross feeder. It will nourish itself on any kind of thinking, including thinking about not thinking.
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Science fiction is a kind of archaeology of the future.
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What is a sense of humor? Surely not the ability to understand a joke. It comes rather from a residing feeling of one's own absurdity. It is the ability to understand a joke, and that the joke is on oneself.
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To read in bed is to draw around us invisible, noiseless curtains. Then at last we are in a room of our own and are ready to burrow back, back to that private life of the imagination we all led as a child and to whose secret satisfactions so many of us have mislaid the key.
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There is no reader so parochial as the one who reads none but this morning's books. Books are not rolls, to be devoured only when they are hot and fresh. A good book retains its interior heat and will warm a generation yet unborn.
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One measure of friendship consists not in the number of things friends can discuss, but in the number of things they need no longer mention.
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For most men, life is a search for the proper Manila envelope in which to get themselves filed.
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The kind of poetry to avoid in the pretty-pretty kind that pleased our grandmothers, the kind that Longfellow and Tennyson, good poets at their best, wrote at their worst.
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A good memory is one trained to forget the trivial.
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As between mileage and experience choose experience.
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A sense of humor is the ability to understand a joke-and that the joke is oneself.
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Cheese is milk's leap towards immortality.
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The German mind has a talent for making no mistakes but the very greatest.
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I think we must quote whenever we feel that the allusion is interesting or helpful or amusing.
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Socrates called himself a midwife of ideas. A great book is often such a midwife, delivering to full existence what has been coiled like an embryo in the dark, silent depths of the brain.
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We are all citizens of history.
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