Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
You become a writer because you like to be alone in a room with your books.
Nick Laird
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Nick Laird
Age: 49
Born: 1975
Born: January 1
Essayist
Lawyer
Literary Critic
Novelist
Poet
Writer
Cookstown
Northern Ireland
Nicholas Laird
Room
Writer
Alone
Books
Become
Book
Like
More quotes by Nick Laird
The whole point of writing poetry or fiction is that you get to agonize over whatever it is you want to say, and you finally say it, and you get it as perfect as you can make it. Then you're forced to babble freestyle.
Nick Laird
With an age difference comes a great gap in cultural references, and so on. It's not all about race and gender. It interests me that, as you get older, your younger self becomes a stranger to you. A split occurs within yourself. But maybe we're all always strangers to ourselves.
Nick Laird
There is such a shelter in each other.
Nick Laird
I think all writing is an attempt to complicate and subvert the dominant narrative. Writing personalizes statistics. It puts a face and a name on a number. I suppose in that sense it's always political.
Nick Laird
New York allows you to go deeper into the person you want to be. You're able to explore whatever your specific interests might be. You can eat good Japanese food if you want to eat good Japanese food. You can go and see your favorite author reading, and you can still listen to Radio Ulster on the internet as you have your breakfast. I love that.
Nick Laird
I'm always reading books, I'm always having encounters, I'm always taking trips. Whatever it is you come up with about how you got started, that's equally true for all the books you didn't start.
Nick Laird
There used to be one writer rather than a team of writers. It's the old line about a camel being a horse designed by committee.
Nick Laird
I think New York is working its way into my poems. It takes a while for a place to filter its way onto the page, but I've been reading more and more American poetry and I certainly feel it as quite a freeing force. Coming from the formally ordered tradition of poetry in Ireland, I find the expansiveness of American literature freeing in some sense.
Nick Laird
She was privileged enough to feel at home anywhere, and to equate squalor with authenticity.
Nick Laird
New York is great for writers insofar as you can pay someone to bring you food, to take your washing out and bring it back clean. It enables you. Writers always feel guilty when they're doing anything but writing, and New York allows you to really write all the time if you want to - though my kids put a limit on it.
Nick Laird
It seems to me that metaphors come down to a certain idea of interconnectedness - that everything relates to everything else. Metaphors don't believe in autonomy. And in the end, perhaps that idea of interconnectedness is a moral position.
Nick Laird
I don't think there's any law where you have to read a poem and immediately understand it.
Nick Laird