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Writing, for me, means humility. It’s a process that involves fear and doubt, especially if you’re writing honestly.
Kiran Desai
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Kiran Desai
Age: 53
Born: 1971
Born: September 3
Author
Novelist
Writer
New Delhi district
Especially
Doubt
Process
Involving
Fear
Involvement
Means
Involves
Mean
Honestly
Writing
Honesty
Humility
More quotes by Kiran Desai
Why couldn't she be part of that family? rent a room in someone else's life.
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I don't think you can write according to a set of rules and laws every writer is so different.
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Saeed quickly found employment at a Banana Republic, where he would sell to urban sophisticates the black turtleneck of the season, in a shop whose name was synonymous with colonial exploitation and the rapacious ruin of the third world.
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Could fulfillment ever be felt as deeply as loss? Romantically she decided that love must surely reside in the gap between desire and fulfillment, in the lack, not the contentment. Love was the ache, the anticipation, the retreat, everything around it but the emotion itself.
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When I was growing up the publishing world seemed so far away. When my mother wrote a book, she would look up the address of publishers on the backs of the books she owned and send off her manuscript.
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New York is a lovely city. It is an easy city to go back to and an easy city to leave. Every time I go there I immediately make travel plans.
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A journey once begun, has no end
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The Indian diaspora is a wonderful place to write from and I am lucky to be part of it.
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I love Truman Capote, Tennessee Williams, Flannery O'Connor. I read a lot of American writers.
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A man wasn't equal to an animal, not one particle of him. Human life was stinking corrupt, and meanwhile there were beautiful creatures who lived with delicacy on the earth without doing anyone harm. We should be dying. the judge almost wept.
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This way of leaving your family for work had condemned them over several generations to have their hearts always in other places, their minds thinking about people elsewhere they could never be in a single existence at one time. How wonderful it was going to be to have things otherwise.
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When he died, I went about like a ragged crow telling strangers, My father died, my father died. My indiscretion embarrassed me, but I could not help it. Without my father on his Delhi rooftop, why was I here? Without him there, why should I go back? Without that ache between us, what was I made of?
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Could fulfillment ever be felt as deeply as loss?
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The publishing world is very timid. Readers are much braver.
Kiran Desai
In India, if you are from the elite, dogs are extremely important. The breed of the dog indicates your wealth, that you are westernized. The cook, another human being, is on a much lower level than your dog. You see this all the time.
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Jemu watched his father disappear. He didn't throw the coconut and he didn't cry. Never again would he know love for another human being that wasn't adulterated by another, contradictory emotion.
Kiran Desai
If you write a lovely story about India, you're criticized for selling an exotic version of India. And if you write critically about India, you're seen as portraying it in a negative light - it also seems to be a popular way to present India, sort of mangoes and beggars.
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