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"As a kid, I didn't read a great deal of fiction, and I've forgotten most of what I did read."
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"Sometime later the islanders on a little rimward atoll were amazed to find, washed into their little local lagoon, the wave-rocked corpse of a hideous sea monster, all beaks, eyes and tentacles. They were further astonished at its size, since it was rather larger than their village. But their surprise was tiny compared to the huge, stricken expression on the face of the dead monster, which appeared to be have been trampled to death."
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Personal Development

"There are people who think that things that happen in fiction do not really happen. These people are wrong."
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"Villainessa Tittel was a hired killer, an assassin by trade. She had enjoyed the best education and had been trained by assassins who had (until then at least) been considered the best in the business. She had turned to 'cleaning' as an occupation because she really enjoyed endings more than beginnings " and anyway, she didn't need to know her mark's entire pedigree or life's story, or to have some kind of facetious moral justification just to collect her fee. Unsurprisingly, when she did read " on those rare occasions " her books were always dog-eared from the back."
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"Literary fiction, as a strict genre, is all but dead. Meanwhile, most genres flourish."
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Personal Development

"If you write fiction, you're by yourself. There are certain advantages to that in that you don't have to explain anything to anybody. But when you get in with others who share the loneliness of the whole enterprise, you're not lonely anymore."
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Personal Development

"If you are writing fiction, think like a god. Release all the power of your imagination; create worlds and destroy them at your will, create as many miracles as your story needs."
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Personal Development

"The beautiful illusion of fiction is that everything makes sense and that there was a purpose, that there was a point to it all. And that's the best possible lie because it may even be true."
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Personal Development

"With respect to the requirement of art, the probable impossible is always preferable to the improbable possible."
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Personal Development

"Neither novels or their readers benefit from any attempts to divine whether any facts hide inside a story. Such efforts attack the very idea that made-up stories can matter, which is sort of the foundational assumption of our species."
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"Literature is a luxury; fiction is a necessity."
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"There's something with the physical size of America... American writers can write about America and it can still feel like a foreign country."
American

"Young readers have to be entertained. No child reads fiction because they think it's going to make them a better person."
Fiction

"I've written 16 children's books and five unpublished novels. Some of the latter were breathtakingly bad."
Books

"Bore children, and they stop reading. There's no room for self-indulgence or showing off or setting the scene."
Family

"I was born too late for steam trains and a lazy eye meant I'd never be an astronaut."
Life

"I think most writers feel like they're on the outside looking in much of the time. All of us feel, to a certain extent, alienated from the stuff going on around us."
Time

"I don't mean that literary fiction is better than genre fiction, On the contrary; novels can perform two functions and most perform only one."
Fiction

"I've worked in television long enough to know that when you stop enjoying that type of thing you go home and do something else."
Home

"Most of my work consisted of crossing out. Crossing out was the secret of all good writing."
Work

"My book has a very simple surface, but there are layers of irony and paradox all the way through it."
Writing
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