Anna Quindlen Quotes About Writing

We have collected for you the TOP of Anna Quindlen's best quotes about Writing! Here are collected all the quotes about Writing starting from the birthday of the Author – July 8, 1952! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 35 sayings of Anna Quindlen about Writing. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • Writing for UrbanMoms has awarded me a multitude of amazing opportunities. I have traveled to new places; alone and with my family. I have discovered new products, new books, new trends and new restaurants, and been able to share them with my readers. I've met other wonderful writers and many incredible celebrities.

    Source: urbanmoms.ca
  • Every story has already been told. Once you've read Anna Karenina, Bleak House, The Sound and the Fury, To Kill a Mockingbird and A Wrinkle in Time, you understand that there is really no reason to ever write another novel. Except that each writer brings to the table, if she will let herself, something that no one else in the history of time has ever had.

    Anna Quindlen (2009). “Being Perfect”, p.36, Random House
  • Writing seems to be the only profession people imagine you can do by thinking about doing it.

    Source: www.writersdigest.com
  • I can't think of anything to write about except families. They are a metaphor for every other part of society.

  • I think I'm like most novelists in that my books have gotten farther and farther away from autobiography the longer I've been writing them.

  • I think books in which people are really happy and things are going well are probably the most challenging novels there are to write, and there are very few of them.

  • The age of technology has both revived the use of writing and provided ever more reasons for its spiritual solace. Emails are letters, after all, more lasting than phone calls, even if many of them r 2 cursory 4 u.

  • Downtime is where we become ourselves, looking into the middle distance, kicking at the curb, lying on the grass or sitting on the stoop and staring at the tedious blue of the summer sky. I don't believe you can write poetry, or compose music, or become an actor without downtime, and plenty of it, a hiatus that passes for boredom but is really the quiet moving of the wheels inside that fuel creativity.

    Anna Quindlen (2004). “Loud and Clear”, p.25, Random House
  • You realize that especially when you're writing a book like this, looking back on your life, that there's just such a depth of understanding you acquire over time with the help of the people who love you that that's when you can really get down to what you really think and believe.

    Source: www.pbs.org
  • the more humdrum aspects of life do not make for gripping reading. To render them compelling, a writer must describe the universal in eloquent and evocative prose. Alas, Frey's writing suggests that this was not an option, and he came up with something else.

  • If you want to write what the world is about, you have to write details...real life is in the dishes. Real life is pushing strollers up the street, folding T-shirts, the alarm clock going off early and you dropping into bed exhausted every night. That's real life.

  • Well, I'd like to think I am, and I'd also like to think that we're all having a lot more fun getting older than we pretend. It was interesting to me when I first started working on this book that I'd mentioned that I was writing a memoir about aging and everybody would moan and groan and carry on.

    Source: www.pbs.org
  • People have writer's block not because they can't write, but because they despair of writing eloquently.

    Essay, www.amazon.com.
  • The New Testament has had a really powerful effect on how I write and how I live my life.

  • My most pronounced writing habit is trying not to write.

    Anna Quindlen (2010). “Every Last One: A Novel”, p.315, Random House
  • When I write a novel, I have what I think of as an icon that helps get me into the world of the book.

    Source: www.writersdigest.com
  • The truth is that when you're writing a novel you're really living in it; you're living in the house, and you're living in the town.

  • I don't have to listen to the Gospel on Sunday to know the stories of the New Testament. They inform so much of what I write that they're practically like a news scrim that goes through my brain 24/7.

    "Anna Quindlen: Over 50, And Having 'Plenty Of Cake'". "Fresh Air" with Terry Gross, kcur.org. April 24, 2012.
  • I'm boggled by the idea of being an only child. I know nothing at all (I'm happy to say) about having had a cold and withholding mother, about being divorced. The more I've been writing novels, each novel I've written has become successively less grounded in anything approaching autobiography.

    Source: urbanmoms.ca
  • We are writers. We danced with words, as children, in what became familiar patterns. The words became our friends and our companions, and without even saying it aloud, a thought danced with them: I can do this. This is who I am.

  • Reporters are not paid to operate in retrospect. Because when news begins to solidify into current events and finally harden intohistory, it is the stories we didn't write, the questions we didn't ask that prove far, far more damaging than the ones we did.

  • You write to suit some sense in yourself and trust that that will resonate with a certain wider readership.

    Source: urbanmoms.ca
  • Novels are usually built on conflict, sometimes very, very difficult conflict. It's why men write war novels - because there you go, there's the conflict writ large.

  • At the same time that you've got to open yourself up to the fact that experience is going to teach you year after year, decade after decade. I remember I very badly wanted to write a newspaper column when I was only 21 years old, and I went to my editor and told him that, and he said, "You're a really good writer, but you haven't lived long enough to be qualified to live out loud."

    Source: www.pbs.org
  • Jane Austen may not be the best writer, but she certainly writes about the best people. And by that I mean people just like me.

  • I can't begin to predict how news will be delivered to readers in, say, 100 years. But I do know one thing that hasn't changed: Whatever the delivery system, whether it's a magazine, book or blog, people like vivid writing, strong stories and credible people. So while the venue is changing rapidly, human nature isn't, which I find soothing.

    Source: www.writersdigest.com
  • Uncontrollable consumerism has become a watchword of our culture despite regular and compelling calls for its end. The United States has more malls than high schools; Americans spend more time shopping than reading. ... Some of the most insightful writing about the American character over the nation's history has been about neither freedom nor democracy but about the crazed impulse to acquire things.

    Anna Quindlen (2004). “Loud and Clear”, p.184, Random House
  • Not writing at all leads to nothing.

  • I don't really read what people write about me. Someone gives my novel one star; are they a troll? Are they someone who hates my politics and so has decided to do that?

    Source: urbanmoms.ca
  • I read and walked for miles at night along the beach, writing bad blank verse and searching endlessly for someone wonderful who would step out of the darkness and change my life. It never crossed my mind that that person could be me.

    Anna Quindlen (2010). “Living Out Loud”, p.11, Ballantine Books
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