Youre here: Home » Famous Quotes » Peter Straub Quotes


FAMOUS QUOTES MENU

» Famous Quotes Home

» Quote Topics

» Author Nationalities

» Author Types

» Popular Searches


 Browse authors:

Peter Straub Quotes


Page 1 of 2
Peter Straub
March 2, 1943 -
Nationality: American
Category: Writer
Subcategory: American Writer

Dick Dart emerged from the ether during a flight from New York with my wife and children to Puerto Rico.

   

Instead, I was interested in what I guess I could call narrative indeterminacy, in questioning the apparent, taken-for-granted authority of any particular representation of the events in question.

   

I instantly chucked my academic ambitions and began writing fiction full-time.

   

If I planned everything out in advance, I'd expire of boredom.

   

Nobody is surprised that women writers accurately represent male characters over and over again, no doubt because everybody knows that women understand men much better than vice-versa.

   

An average working day begins at 8 or 9 am, includes an hour for lunch, and ends at 5 or 6 pm.

   

There have been times when I reread - or at least leafed through - something because I'd sent a copy to a friend, and what usually happened was that I noticed dozens and dozens of clumsy phrases I wished I could rewrite.

   

The actual Blue Rose murders, which lie at the core of the three novels, yield various incorrect solutions which assume the status of truth.

   

However, I think I managed to reach a new level with Koko, and I will always be grateful for the experience.

   

When, in the third book, we do learn the identity of the Blue Rose murderer, the information comes in a muted, nearly off-hand manner, and the man has died long before.

   

My first real breakthrough collided with the last months of Callaghan's Labour government, which had every intention of enjoying my success as much as I did.

   

Each new book is a tremendous challenge.

   

There were a lot of adventure books for boys, historical novels by Kenneth Roberts, and whatever mystery novels the alarmed librarian imagined might not corrupt an eager but innocent youth.

   

I generally wade in blind and trust to fate and instinct to see me through.

   

As soon as I started writing Julia, by which I mean while writing its first sentence, I felt a sudden, reassuring charge of excitement. I knew it was going to work.

   

Fear and I were old buddies, despite my best efforts to the contrary.

   

On gym days, I don't get to my desk until 4 in the afternoon, and everything except bedtime and the appointment with the liquid narcotic is pushed back a bit.

   

These days, there are a great many books about childhood trauma and its effects, but at the time all the experts agreed that one should forget about it as quickly as possible and pick up where you left off.

   

I write longer sentences than most of the others, maybe because I probably like Henry James more than they do.

   

Many fiction writers eventually want to feel that their work forms a single, unified entity.

   

Page:   1 | 2

Privacy Policy
Copyright © 1999-2008 eDigg.com. All rights reserved.