Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
When I wrote The Interestings, I wanted to let time unspool, to give the book the feeling of time passing. I had to allow myself the freedom to move back and forth in time freely, and to trust that readers would accept this.
Meg Wolitzer
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Meg Wolitzer
Age: 65
Born: 1959
Born: May 28
Novelist
University Teacher
Writer
Brooklyn
New York
Giving
Feeling
Passing
Would
Freedom
Wrote
Time
Moving
Allow
Feelings
Accept
Give
Reader
Freely
Back
Accepting
Passings
Wanted
Move
Readers
Book
Trust
Forth
More quotes by Meg Wolitzer
We sometimes drive ourselves crazy with how our books will be seen, when in fact we already know what they're about, and where our obsessions are. If we can spin those obsessions into fiction, then there's a decent chance they will be fiction-worthy, as you call it. The idea of the sweep of ideas is a complicated one.
Meg Wolitzer
Both my mother and I have close groups of friends that include other writers, and these friendships are very important to us.
Meg Wolitzer
Just the act of sleeping beside someone you liked to be with. Maybe that was love.
Meg Wolitzer
While it's true that some writers, when taking on love and war, find the task too big, or only succeed in one but not the other, Mengestu tracks both themes with authority and feeling.
Meg Wolitzer
Wasn't the whole point of being an artist, or at least part of it, that you didn't have to wear a tie?
Meg Wolitzer
In The Interestings I wanted to write about what happens to talent over time. In some people talent blooms, in others it falls away.
Meg Wolitzer
Books light the fire-whether it's a book that's already written, or an empty journal that needs to be filled in.
Meg Wolitzer
But this post-college world felt different from everything that had come before it art was still central, but now everyone had to think about making a living too, and they did so with a kind of scorn for money except as it allowed them to live the way they wanted to live.
Meg Wolitzer
We do seem, as a culture, to fetishize the sweep. But I know there's room for big short, fierce novels, and big solid ones.
Meg Wolitzer
But now the world, he thought, had taken them. He knew that this could suddenly happen. One day you just woke up, and there was somewhere that you needed to be.
Meg Wolitzer
I always thought it was the saddest and most devastating ending. How you could have these enormous dreams that never get met. How without knowing it you could just make yourself smaller over time. I don't want that to happen to me.
Meg Wolitzer
To be anorexic...she thought, amounted to wanting to shed yourself of some of the imperfect mosaic of pieces that made you who you were. She could understand that now for, maybe underneath that desquamated self you would locate a new version.
Meg Wolitzer
It seemed that everywhere you went, people quickly adapted to the way they had to live, and called it Life.
Meg Wolitzer
People could not get enough of what they had lost, even if they no longer wanted it.
Meg Wolitzer
People like to warn you that by the time you reach the middle of your life, passion will begin to feel like a meal eaten long ago, which you remember with great tenderness.
Meg Wolitzer
I've been waiting for someone to sign the permission slip for me to write about sex. In the meantime, I've written about sex in all my books anyway.
Meg Wolitzer
You had only one chance for a signature in life, but most people left no impression.
Meg Wolitzer
Everybody has a theme. You talk to somebody awhile, and you realize they have one particular thing that rules them. The best you can do is a variation on the theme, but that's about it.
Meg Wolitzer
After a certain age, you felt a need not to be alone. It grew stronger, like a radio frequency, until finally it was so powerful that you were forced to do something about it.
Meg Wolitzer
But it had no doubt sprung from true emotion, for all that parents ever wanted, really, was for you to love their child the way they did.
Meg Wolitzer