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If literature truly possesses a mysterious power, I think perhaps it is precisely this: that one can read a book by a writer of a different time, a different country, a different race, a different language, and a different culture and there encounter a sensation that is one's very own.

~ Yu Hua

Yu Hua Literature Power Of Words Reading

But the thing about Literature is, well, basically it encapsulates all the disciplines - it's history, philosophy, politics, sexual politics, sociology, psychology, linguistics, science. Literature is mankind's organised response to the world around him, or her.

~ David Nicholls

David Nicholls David Nicholls Literature Starter For Ten

The measure of a work of art is how much art it has in it, not how much ‘relevance’. Relevant to whom? Relevant to what? Nothing is more ephemeral than a hot topic.

~ Edward St. Aubyn

Edward St. Aubyn Art Literature

Stories don’t teach us to be good; it isn’t as simple as that. They show us what it feels like to be good, or to be bad. They show us people like ourselves doing right things and wrong things, acting bravely or acting meanly, being cruel or being kind, and they leave it up to our own powers of empathy and imagination to make the connection with our own lives. Sometimes we do, sometimes we don’t. It isn’t like putting a coin in a machine and getting a chocolate bar; we’re not mechanical, we don’t respond every time in the same way…The moral teaching comes gently, and quietly, and little by little, and weighs nothing at all. We hardly know it’s happening. But in this silent and discreet way, with every book we read and love, with every story that makes its way into our heart, we gradually acquire models of behavior and friends we admire and patterns of decency and kindness to follow.

~ Philip Pullman

Philip Pullman Literature Morality

Every man's work, whether it be literature, or music or pictures or architecture or anything else, is always a portrait of himself.

~ Samuel Butler

Samuel Butler Art Literature Music Work

Tis true what Hemingway says--if we're lucky enough to live our dreams in youth, as Ernest Hemingway did in 1920's Paris and I did with the Beat poets, then youth's dreams become a moveable feast you take wherever you go--youthful love remains the repast plentiful; exquisite, substantive and good. You can live on happy memories. Eat of them forever.

~ Alison Winfield Burns

Alison Winfield Burns Art Friendship Hemingway Kerouac Literature Paris

Everyone in this tale has a rock-solid hamartia: hers, that she is so sick; yours, that you are so well. Were she better or you sicker, then the stars would not be so terribly crossed, but it is the nature of stars to cross, and never was Shakespeare more wrong than when he had Cassius, The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves.

~ John Green

John Green Julius Caesar Literature Shakespeare

A person who knows nothing about literature may be an ignoramus, but many people don't mind being that.

~ Northrop Frye

Northrop Frye Civilization Literature

Clarissa had a theory in those days - they had heaps of theories, always theories, as young people have. It was to explain the feeling they had of dissatisfaction; not knowing people; not being known. For how could they know each other? You met every day; then not for six months, or years. It was unsatisfactory, they agreed, how little one knew people.

~ Virginia Woolf

Virginia Woolf Literature

The darkest of men carry the brightest of lights

~ Joe Putignano

Joe Putignano Acrobaddict Cirque Cirque Du Soleil Gymnastics Heroin Addiction Joe Putignano Literature Quotes Survival Story

I reread these negative remarks and realize that I do not know whether music can despair of music or marble of marble. I do know that literature is an art that can foresee the time when it will be silenced, an art that can become inflamed with its own virtue, fall in love with its own decline, and court its own demise.

~ Jorge Luis Borges

Jorge Luis Borges Art Literature

Modern literature is a north-east wind--a blight of the human soul. I take credit to myself for having helped to make it so. The way to produce fine fruit is to blight the flower. You call this a paradox. Marry, so be it.

~ Thomas Love Peacock

Thomas Love Peacock Humor Literature

If we go on in this way, we shall have a new art of poetry, of which one of the first rules will be: To remember to forget that there are any such things as sunshine and music in the world.

~ Thomas Love Peacock

Thomas Love Peacock Humourous Literature Poetry

To read well, that is, to read true books in a true spirit, is a noble exercise, and one that will task the reader more than any exercise which the customs of the day esteem. It requires a training such as the athletes underwent, the steady intention almost of the whole life to this object. Books must be read as deliberately and reservedly as they were written. It is not enough even to be able to speak the language of that nation by which they are written, for there is a memorable interval between the spoken and the written language, the language heard and the language read.

~ Henry David Thoreau

Henry David Thoreau Books Reading Literature

He did not wholly understand the intricate play of ideas and the complex phrases, but as he read he sensed a strong, who purpose behind the words and he felt that he almost understood.

~ Carson Mccullers

Carson Mccullers Literature Reading Writing

The re-evaluation and rediscovery of minority art (including the cultural minority of women) is often conceived as a matter of remedying injustice and exclusiveness through doing justice to individual artists by allowing their work into the canon, which will thereby be more complete, but fundamentally unchanged.

~ Joanna Russ

Joanna Russ Injustice Literature Minorities Systematic Oppression Women

Stories don’t teach us to be good; it isn’t as simple as that. They show us what it feels like to be good, or to be bad. They show us people like ourselves doing right things and wrong things, acting bravely or acting meanly, being cruel or being kind, and they leave it up to our own powers of empathy and imagination to make the connection with our own lives. Sometimes we do, sometimes we don’t. It isn’t like putting a coin in a machine and getting a chocolate bar; we’re not mechanical, we don’t respond every time in the same way…The moral teaching comes gently, and quietly, and little by little, and weighs nothing at all. We hardly know it’s happening. But in this silent and discreet way, with every book we read and love, with every story that makes its way into our heart, we gradually acquire models of behaviour and friends we admire and patterns of decency and kindness to follow.

~ Philip Pullman

Philip Pullman Literature Morality

The literature hardly helps. You remember it only when you are well, healthy, and in a positive state of mind. And you tend to blame your circumstances and people around you for the outcome of the follies you commit.

~ Girdhar Joshi

Girdhar Joshi Follies Literature Positive Mindset

Perhaps forgiveness wasn’t a singular event, but a progression, or better, a dance that took some figuring before you could perform the steps.

~ Bonnie Grove

Bonnie Grove Contemporary Fiction Literature Psychological Drama

Thus like a Captive in an Isle confin'd,Man walks at large, a Pris'ner of the Mind

~ John Dryden

John Dryden Literature Plays

The American's literature is all about being hot and sexy, inspiring a girl and going to bed with her. It focuses on being a hero, saving lives and surviving last, but it has nothing to do with dignity, serenity.

~ M.f. Moonzajer

M.f. Moonzajer America Bed Dignity Girl Hot Literature Lives Serenity Sexy Surviving

On of the reasons that I wanted to study literature was because it exposed everything. Writers looked for secrets that had never been mined. Every writer has to invent their own magical language, in order to describe the indescribable. They might seem to be writing in French, English, or Spanish, but really they were writing in the language of butterflies, crows, and hanged men.

~ Heather O'neill

Heather O'neill Language Literature Writing

So Matilda's strong young mind continued to grow, nurtured by the voices of all those authors who had sent their books out into the world like ships on the sea.

~ Roald Dahl

Roald Dahl Books Literature Reading

I can hear the library humming in the night, a choir of authors murmuring inside their books along the unlit, alphabetical shelves, Giovanni Pontano next to Pope, Dumas next to his son, each one stitched into his own private coat, together forming a low, gigantic chord of language.

~ Billy Collins

Billy Collins Books Library Literature Poetry Reading Words

All choice of words is slang. It marks a class.” “There is correct English: that is not slang.” “I beg your pardon: correct English is the slang of prigs who write history and essays. And the strongest slang of all is the slang of poets.

~ George Eliot

George Eliot Literature

To provoke dreams of terror in the slumber of prosperity has become the moral duty of literature.

~ Ernst Fischer

Ernst Fischer Literature Moral

Great language and great literature do not survive long without each other

~ Lance Conrad

Lance Conrad Books Inspirational Language Literature

This is the paradox of the power of literature: it seems that only when it is persecuted does it show its true powers, challenging authority, whereas in our permissive society it feels that it is being used merely to create the occasional pleasing contrast to the general ballooning of verbiage.

~ Italo Calvino

Italo Calvino Books Literature Power Of The Written Word Writing

When a child is born, I once explained to the kids, some dads lay down bottles of wine for them that will mature when they grow up into ungrateful adults. Instead, what you're going to get from me, as each of you turns sixteen, is a library of the one hundred books that gave me the most pleasure when I was a know-nothing adolescent.

~ Mordecai Richler

Mordecai Richler Books Humor Literature Reading

The poet is a faker / Who's so good at his act / He even fakes the pain / Of pain he feels in fact.

~ Fernando Pessoa

Fernando Pessoa Humor Literature Poet Poetry Wit

He gave it its present name, and lived here shut up: day and night poring over the wicked heaps of papers in the suit, and hoping against hope to disentangle it from its mystification and bring it to a close. In the meantime, the place became dilapidated, the wind whistled through the cracked walls, the rain fell through the broken roof, the weeds choked the passage to the rotting door. When I brought what remained of him home here, the brains seemed to me to have been blown out of the house too; it was so shattered and ruined.

~ Charles Dickens

Charles Dickens Literature

Literature is integrated, and I'm not just talking about color or race. I'm talking about the power of literature to make us recognize - and again and again - the wholeness of the human experience.

~ Ralph Ellison

Ralph Ellison Humanity Literature

Reading literature is a way of reaching back to something bigger and older and different. It can give you the feeling that you belong to the past as well as the present, and it can help you realize that your present will someday be someone else’s past. This may be disheartening, but it can also be strangely consoling at times.

~ Wendy Lesser

Wendy Lesser Books Literature Reading Words

On THE AMBER SPYGLASS:If this plotline was a motorist, it would have been arrested for driving while intoxicated, if it had not perished in the horrible drunk accident where it went headlong over the cliff of the author's preachy message, tumbled down the rocky hillside, crashed, and burned.

~ John C. Wright

John C. Wright His Dark Materials Literature Philip Pullman Plotting

He had some taste for romance reading before he went to the university, where, we must confess, in justice to his college, he was cured of the love of reading in all its shapes; and the cure would have been radical, if disappointment in love, and total solitude, had not conspired to bring on a relapse.

~ Thomas Love Peacock

Thomas Love Peacock Books Literature Reading Words

If I could change the attitude of young men toward literature, I would want them to read not just for escape, but because literature can be more truthful about things like sex, commitment, and aging. It can be more truthful about the stuff that our parents lied to us (and themselves) about, and the stuff that everyone has to lie about. It can all be dealt with truthfully in fiction and poetry.

~ Lorin Stein

Lorin Stein Literature Reading

But when the wizard is onstage as the main character, you have to adopt what I call the Jack Vance Rule. I call it this because Jack Vance is the first author successfully and adroitly to have applied this rule in his The Dying Earth. The Jack Vance Rule is: (1) The wizard has to be able to do something unusual, or else he is not a wizard, (2) he cannot do everything, or else there is no drama; therefore (3) the story teller has to communicate to the reader whatever the dividing line is that separates what the wizard can do from what he cannot do, so that the reader can have a reasonable expectation of knowing what the wizard can and cannot do.

~ John C. Wright

John C. Wright Fantasy Literature Wizards

The literature of impotence is about to develop beyond measure.

~ Julien Torma

Julien Torma Alt Lit Euphorisms Impotence Literature Literature Of Impotence Prescient

Childhood only comes around once. Make your child's memories special. Take them on a new adventure each day. It is as simple as opening a book.

~ K. Lamb

K. Lamb Book Child Childhood Dani P Mystery Educate K Lamb Kid Kidlit Learn Literature Memories Read Teach

Imagine the same scene in HAMLET if Pullman had written it. Hamlet, using a mystic pearl, places the poison in the cup to kill Claudius. We are all told Claudius will die by drinking the cup. Then Claudius dies choking on a chicken bone at lunch. Then the Queen dies when Horatio shows her the magical Mirror of Death. This mirror appears in no previous scene, nor is it explained why it exists. Then Ophelia summons up the Ghost from Act One and kills it, while she makes a speech denouncing the evils of religion. Ophelia and Hamlet are parted, as it is revealed in the last act that a curse will befall them if they do not part ways.

~ John C. Wright

John C. Wright Hamlet His Dark Materials Literature Philip Pullman Plotting Shakespeare
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