top of page
Quote_1.png
Flannery O'Connor

"Mrs. Hopewell had no bad qualities of her own but she was able to use other people's in such a constructive way that she never felt the lack."

Standard 
 Customized
"Mrs. Hopewell had no bad qualities of her own but she was able to use other people's in such a constructive way that she never felt the lack."

Exlpore more Social quotes

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"The real reason the number of things that are shared via social media every single minute is so astronomical is because, whenever they each do, most users do not share or say something because they believe they have something worth remembering; they do mainly or only because they fear being forgotten."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"You know you made it, when your friends tell their friends that you are their friend."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"Live together as united people in a beautiful peaceful world."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"Strangers," the Blue Man said, "are just family yo have yet to come to know."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"When you're on a Ferris wheel all anyone ever talks about is being on the Ferris wheel and the view from the Ferris wheel and whether the Ferris wheel is scary and how many more times it will go around. Dating is like that. Nobody who's doing it ever talks about anything else. I have no interest in dating."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"Looks like somebody's got jungle fever.''That's not even the right kind of racist."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"Anonymity beats fame. One cannot undo fame."

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"Frequently, I have been asked how I got to be this way. How did I, born black in a white country, poor in a society where wealth is adored and sought after at all costs, female in an environment where only large ships and some engines are described favourably by using the female pronoun-how did I get to be Maya Angelou?"

Quote_1.png
Asa Don Brown

"If you build a wall they won't come."

Explore more quotes by Flannery O'Connor

Quote_1.png
Flannery O'Connor
"The meaning of a story should go on expanding for the reader the more he thinks about it, but meaning cannot be captured in an interpretation. If teachers are in the habit of approaching a story as if it were a research problem for which any answer is believable so long as it is not obvious, then I think students will never learn to enjoy fiction. Too much interpretation is certainly worse than too little, and where feeling for a story is absent, theory will not supply it."
Quote_1.png
Flannery O'Connor
"Hazel Motes sat at a forward angel on the green plush train seat, looking one minute at the window as if he might want to jump out of it, and the next down the aisle at the other end of the car."
Quote_1.png
Flannery O'Connor
"What one has as a born Catholic is something given and accepted before it is experienced. I am only slowly coming to experience things that I have all along accepted. I suppose the fullest writing comes from what has been accepted and experienced both and that I have just not got that far yet all the time. Conviction without experience makes for harshness."
Quote_1.png
Flannery O'Connor
"Lord, I believe; help my unbelief'... is the most natural and most human and most agonizing prayer in the gospels, and I think it is the foundation prayer of faith."
Quote_1.png
Flannery O'Connor
"He has the mistaken notion that a concern with grace is a concern with exalted human behavior, that it is a pretentious concern. It is, however, simply a concern with the human reaction to that which, instant by instant, gives life to the soul. It is a concern with a realization that breeds charity and with the charity that breeds action. Often the nature of grace can be made plain only by describing its absence."
Quote_1.png
Flannery O'Connor
"Art transcends its limitations only by staying within them."
Quote_1.png
Flannery O'Connor
"People without hope not only don't write novels, but what is more to the point, they don't read them."
Quote_1.png
Flannery O'Connor
"There is something in us, as storytellers and as listeners to stories, that demands the redemptive act, that demands that what falls at least be offered the chance to be restored. The reader of today looks for this motion, and rightly so, but what he has forgotten is the cost of it. His sense of evil is diluted or lacking altogether, and so he has forgotten the price of restoration. When he reads a novel, he wants either his sense tormented or his spirits raised. He wants to be transported, instantly, either to mock damnation or a mock innocence."
Quote_1.png
Flannery O'Connor
"The truth is not distorted here, but rather a distortion is used to get at truth."
Quote_1.png
Flannery O'Connor
"She had observed that the more education they got, the less they could do. Their father had gone to a one-room schoolhouse through the eighth grade and he could do anything."
bottom of page