Works of art are meant to be lived with and loved, and if we try to understand them, we should try to understand them as we try to understand anyone – in order to know them better, not in order to know something else.
If death itself were to die, would it have a ghost, and would the ghost of death visit the dead in the guise of someone alive, if only to fright them from any temptation to return?
Sports, politics, and religion are the three passions of the badly educated.
If there were genders to genres, fiction would be unquestionably feminine.
What one wants to do with stories is screw them up.
Surely it’s better to live in the country, to live on a prairie by a drawing of rivers, in Iowa or Illinois or Indiana, say, than in any city, in any stinking fog of human beings, in any blooming orchard of machines. It ought to be.
I write because I hate. A lot. Hard.
Freud thought that a psychosis was a waking dream, and that poets were daydreamers too, but I wonder if the reverse is not as often true, and that madness is a fiction lived in like a rented house.
I should like to suggest that at least on the face of it a stroke by stroke story of a copulation is exactly as absurd as a chew by chew account of the consumption of a chicken’s wing.
And I am in retirement from love.
It art can only succeed through the cooperating imagination and intelligence of its consumers, who fill out, for themselves, the artist’s world and make it round, and whose own special genius partly determine the ultimate glory of it.
Only the slow reader will notice the odd crowd of images-flier, butcher, seal-which have gathered to comment on the aims and activities of the speeding reader, perhaps like gossips at a wedding.
If you were a fully realized person-whatever the hell that would be-you wouldn’t fool around writing books.
Words are the supreme objects. They are minded things.
I publish a piece in order to kill it, so that I won’t have to fool around with it any longer.
We converse as we live by repeating, by combining and recombining a few elements over and over again just as nature does when of elementary particles it builds a world.
When book and reader’s furrowed brow meet, it isn’t always the book that’s stupid.
Blue is therefore most suitable as the color of interior life.
The speeding reader guts a book the way the skillful clean fish. The gills are gone, the tail, the scales, the fins; then the fillet slides away swifly as though fed to a seal.
Some people say their life is full of darkness and I wonder why they don’t just try and switch the lights on.
I was struck by the way in which meanings are historically attached to words: it is so accidental, so remote, so twisted. A word is like a schoolgirl’s room – a complete mess – so the great thing is to make out a way of seeing it all as ordered, as right, as inferred and following.