Home
Authors
Tags
App
Get QuoteDark Inspirational Quotes App
All Quotes by author - Ben Dolnick
" A novel is no mere assemblage of gears; it is a wild and living being. And how are you to discern the intentions of a creature - to discover its true nature - other than by close and respectful observation? "
Gears
True
Nature
" A novel quite possibly won't be good and, even more possibly, will have not-good parts, but at least it won't shape-shift on you; at least you can say that you're halfway through and know that this maps onto some clear, visualizable chunk of narrative. "
Good
Know
Say
" A short-story collection is harder to formulate pithy sentences about. "
About
Collection
Harder
" A social worker named Cosette Rae, along with a therapist named Hilarie Cash, founded 'ReSTART' in what, until then, had been Rae's house. "
House
Cash
Therapist
" Beginning in middle school, the era of wide-margined, Bible-paged anthologies, short stories develop unpromising associations - and these associations often linger through college, when stories become the things distributed in Xeroxes missing entire pages of line-endings. "
College
School
Short
" Books like Munro's are so deeply personal and idiosyncratic that it feels like a violation to subject them to the crude business of committee meetings and PR releases; you might as well storm a butterfly den with a klieg light. "
You
Business
Butterfly
" Enrichment happened to be my favorite time of day in the Children's Zoo, since it offered relief from the security-guard-esque standing around that makes up most of a zookeeper's day. "
Day
Up
Zoo
" For a long time, since story collections look almost precisely like novels, I presumed that they were meant to be enjoyed in the same way as novels. "
Long
Look
Long Time
" If you were placing bets on which author would write the tenderest, most moving book about fatherhood, Philip Roth would probably come in at the bottom of the list. "
You
Write
Moving
" I know very well that to admit to loving Bright Eyes is to admit to having an overgrown brain region devoted to self-pity, sentimentality, regret, and a handful of other not very appealing emotional states. "
Loving
Admit
Brain
" In life, we like tranquility; in books, we love tension. "
Life
Like
Tranquility
" In the Children's Zoo, Enrichment meant presenting the goats with a trash can smeared with peanut butter or dangling keys at the end of a broomstick in front of the cow. The goats would knock their heads around the inside of the can and emerge giddy, peanut butter drunk. "
End
Zoo
Trash
" I've sold all but one of my microphones, put away my mini-notebooks, stopped scouring the Internet for scraps of wisdom. "
Scraps
Wisdom
Internet
" I will never, most likely, be good at the piano, but thanks to it, I will never forget the humbling, infuriating, necessary slowness of progress in any artistic endeavor. "
Forget
Good
Never Forget
" I would love to love Saul Bellow, but by page fifty of 'Herzog', something within me has wandered into another room. "
Fifty
Love
Me
" Literary interviews are inevitably packed with the nuts and bolts of how writers do their work, and there's very little that aspiring writers do more readily than fling other people's nuts and bolts into their toolboxes. "
Interviews
Work
People
" Oberst is one of those musicians that some people hate in a visceral, biological way. "
Musicians
People
Some People
" Of course I knew that writing was terrifically hard work and that there was no secret code, as in a video game, that would unlock Tolstoy-mode, enabling me to crank out canon-worthy novellas before lunch. "
Writing
Me
Lunch
" One of my more hectoring voices, throughout my career, has been the one that says I ought to stop what I'm doing and make an outline. "
Career
Doing
More
" Sometimes I think there ought to be a coat of arms for all of us who listen to Oberst's band Bright Eyes past the age of twenty-six. 'With Love and Shame,' the motto would read. The handwriting would be the cramped and tortured scribble of a high school freshman. "
Eyes
Age
Love
" The patron saint of outlining - the bespectacled siren who sings to me from his spotless rock - is P. G. Wodehouse. "
Patron
Who
Siren
" To write fiction is to think that you're doing it wrong - that your work habits are inhibiting you; that you've chosen the wrong subject; that you've chosen the right subject, but that someone else has, unbeknownst to you, already written exactly the book you're laboring over. "
Someone
You
Work
" True atonement isn't the periodic shaving of karmic stubble via confessional; it requires deep, truthful change. It means doing the hardest thing of all: not making the same stupid mistake again. "
Doing
Stupid
Change
" Upon reading the deeply serious opening of Scott Spencer's 'Endless Love', you will very likely laugh out loud. The tone is something like what you might find in a teenager's diary: verbose, feverish, furiously self-important. "
Love
Laugh
Reading
" We humans, just like the animals in our zoos, were born into bodies whose workings are both mechanistically predictable and unfathomably complex. Put in lots of sugar, and we'll get fat and sick. Confine our movement, and we'll get weak and antsy. Give us some manageable problems with which to grapple, and we'll cheer up. "
Sick
Weak
Fat
" Writing is a sufficiently lonely and mysterious pastime that I don't begrudge myself a talisman or two, so long as they don't become ways of distracting myself from the glum inescapability of actual work. "
Work
Long
Myself
Check our other websites:
BookDark
MusicDark