Harold Brodkey, an American author known for his lyrical prose and introspective storytelling, explored the complexities of human experience with sensitivity and insight. His novels and short stories delved into the intricacies of love, loss, and identity, earning him acclaim as a master of the contemporary American novel.

"I feel sorry for the man who marries you... because everyone thinks you're sweet and you're not."



"So an autobiography about death should include, in my case, an account of European Jewry and of Russian and Jewish events - pogroms and flights and murders and the revolution that drove my mother to come here."



"True stories, autobiographical stories, like some novels, begin long ago, before the acts in the account, before the birth of some of the people in the tale."



"Me, my literary reputation is mostly abroad, but I am anchored here in New York. I can't think of any other place I'd rather die than here."



"Almost the first thing I did when I became ill was to buy a truly good television set."



"I am sensible of the velocity of the moments, and entering that part of my head alert to the motion of the world I am aware that life was never perfect, never absolute. This bestows contentment, even a fearlessness."


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"I look upon another's insistence on the merits of his or her life - duties, intellect, accomplishment - and see that most of it is nonsense."


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"I am in an adolescence in reverse, as mysterious as the first, except that this time I feel it as a decay of the odds that I might live for a while, that I can sleep it off."

