All writers are waiting for replies. That’s what I’ve learned. Maybe all human beings are
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Writing is a sickness only cured by writing.
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It is what writers do, imagine and feel the pain of others, sometimes at the expense of feeling their own. Here, then, in these pages is mine, the fear of death, of loss, of unexpressed love. Here is the truth told in a story. And in the telling of it perhaps I have found some way to have courage, to believe.
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The parts of our lives when we write them down seem to belong in different books, by different writers even. What all these bits and pieces make up I dont know. There is no plot. Perhaps meaning is something we invent afterward, putting it all together, like imagined God.
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When my father first took me to Ennis Library I went down among the shelves and felt company, not only the company of writers, but the readers too, because they had lifted and opened and read these books. The books were worn in a way they can only get worn by hands and eyes and minds
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Its a blindness thing, faith.
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Its been well-thumbed, at least triple-read, theres that smell the fat orange-spine Penguins get when their pages have yellowed and the book bulges, basically the smell of complex humanity, sort of sweat and salt and endeavour. Like all the fat orange Penguins, it gets fatter with reading, which it should, because in a way the more you read it the bigger your own experience of the world gets, the fatter your soul.
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You cant be beautiful and a writer, because to be a writer you have to be the one doing the looking; if youre beautiful people will be looking at you.
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Human beings are not seamless smooth creations, they have insoluble parts, and the closer you look the more mysterious they become.
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We are our stories. We tell them to stay alive or keep alive those who only live now in the telling.
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If I am alive this is my book, and my father lives now in the afterlife that is a book, a thing not vague or virtual but something you can hold and feel and smell because to my mind heaven like life must be a thing sensual and real. And my book will be a river and have the Salmon literal and metaphoric leaping inside it and be called History of the Rain, so that his book does not perish, and you will know my book exists because of him and because of his books and his aspiration to leap up, to rise. You will know that I found him in his books, in the covers his hands held, the pages they turned, in the paper and the print, but also in the worlds those books contained, where now I have been and you have been too. You will know the story goes from the past to the present and into the future, and like a river flows.
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In love everything changes, and continues changing all the time. There is no stillness, no stopped clock of the heart in which the moment of happiness holds forever, but only the constant whirring forward motion of desire and need, rising and falling, falling and rising, full of doubts then certainties that moment by moment change and become doubts again.
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Neither did she realise yet that grief is a kind of glue, too, that the essence of humanity is this empathy, and that we fall together in that moment of tenderest perception when we see and feel each others wounds and know anothers sorrow like a brother of our own.
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Love ... was part imagination, its web spun as much in the dark lonely separated evenings of longing as in the shared times together.
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Ive read dozens of interviews and accounts that basically come down to How Poets Do It and the truth is theyre all do-lally and theyre all different. Theres Gerard Manly Hopkins in his black Jesuit clothes lying face down on the ground to look at an individual bluebell, Robert Frost who never used a desk, was once caught short by a poem coming and wrote it on the sole of his shoe, T.S. Eliot in his Im-not-a-Poet suit with his solid sensible available-for-poetry three hours a day, Ted Hughes folded into his tiny cubicle at the top of the stairs where there is no window, no sight or smell of earth or animal but the rain clatter on the roof bows him to the page, Pablo Neruda who grandly declared poetry should only ever be handwritten, and then added his own little bit of bonkers by saying: in green ink. Poets are their own nation. Most of them know.
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