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Quotes by Anne Tyler

Anne Tyler

It struck her all at once that dealing with other human beings was an awful lot of work.

My cousin Roger once told me, on the eve of his third wedding, that he felt marriage was addictive. Then he corrected himself. I mean early marriage, he said. The very start of a marriage. Its like a whole new beginning. Youre entirely brand-new people; you havent made any mistakes yet. You have a new place to live and new dishes and this new kind of, like, identity, this we that gets invited everywhere together now. Why, sometimes your wife will have a brand-new name, even.

She started to speak, but then stopped. Anything she could think of to say seemed a mistake. In fact, speech in general seemed a mistake. It struck her all at once that dealing with other human beings was an awful lot of work. from Back When We Were Grownups.

She loved them so much that she felt a kind of hollowness on the inner surface of her arms whenever she looked at them- an ache of longing to pull them close and hold them tight against her.

It wasnt what you said, he told her.It was how I felt when you said it.

You know why I like to talk to you, Delia? You never interrupt with your experiences. Not jiggling your foot till you get a chance to jump in with your life history.

Epictetus say that everything has two handles, one by which it can be borne and one which it cannot. If your brother sins against you, he says, dont take hold of it by the wrong he did you but by the fact that hes your brother. Thats how it can be borne.

People imagine that missing a loved one works kind of like missing cigarettes. The first day is really hard but the next day is less hard and so forth, easier and easier the longer you go on. But instead it’s like missing water. Every day, you notice the person’s absence more.

For once, the tears wouldnt come. She saw that Michael might have been right. It really could be too cold to snow.

Past is past... no its not! People are always fond of saying that, but whats past is never past; not entirely.

There ought to be a while separate language, she thought, for words that are truer than other words - for perfect, absolute truth. It was the purest fact of her life: she did not understand him, and she never would.

He honestly believed, for an instant, that what hed heard was music-a tune piped, a burble of notes, a little scrap of melody floating by on wind and breaking his heart.

Alex Barrow’s broad face, with the roughened skin that gave him an air of experience. His powerful, packed, wrestler’s body. The thick black fur at the base of his throat. It was wrong to call him handsome, although all the women did. Really he was almost ugly, but in a stirring, thrilling way that made her shift in her seat as she thought about him.

The trouble with discarding bad memories was that evidently the good ones went with them

Dont count on me to take you in because Im angry. Im angry at you for leading us on such a song and dance all these years, not just these few years but all the years, skipping all those holidays and staying away from beach trips and missing Mom and Dads thirtieth anniversary and their thirty-fifth and Jeannies baby and not attending my wedding that time or even sending a card or calling to wish me well. But most of all Denny, most of all: I will never forgive you for consuming every last little drop of our parents attention and leaving nothing for the rest of us.

Ghosts... they are the completions of the deads intended gestures, there unfinished plans still hanging in the air - something like when you forgot one thing and so you pantomime the motion.

What if heaven is just a vast consciousness that the dead return to? And their assignment is to report on the experiences they collected during their time on earth?...The spring mornings they woke up to a million birds singing their hearts out, and the summer afternoons with the swim towels hung over the porch rail, and the October air that smelled like wood smoke and apple cider, and the warm yellow windows of home when they came in on a snowy night. Thats what my experience has been, they say, and it gets folded in with the others--one more report on what living felt like. What it was like to be alive.

He was perfect, was how shed put it to herself. And then that clear-eyed, calm-faced boy would shine forth from Reds sags and wrinkles, from his crumpled eyelids and hollowed cheeks and the two deep crevices bracketing his mouth and just his general obtuseness, his stubbornness, his infuriating belief that simple cold logic could solve all lifes problems, and she would feel unspeakably lucky to have ended up with him.

But if you never did anything you couldnt undo youd end up doing nothing at all.

For me, writing was the only way out.