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V. S. Naipaul Quotes


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V. S. Naipaul
August 17, 1932 -
Nationality: Indian
Category: Novelist
Subcategory: Indian Novelist

As a child I knew almost nothing, nothing beyond what I had picked up in my grandmother's house. All children, I suppose, come into the world like that, not knowing who they are.

   

That element of surprise is what I look for when I am writing. It is my way of judging what I am doing - which is never an easy thing to do.

   

In Trinidad, where as new arrivals we were a disadvantaged community, that excluding idea was a kind of protection; it enabled us - for the time being, and only for the time being - to live in our own way and according to our own rules, to live in our own fading India.

   

One always writes comedy at the moment of deepest hysteria.

   

The world is always in movement.

   

All the details of the life and the quirks and the friendships can be laid out for us, but the mystery of the writing will remain. No amount of documentation, however fascinating, can take us there.

   

This is unusual for me. I have given readings and not lectures. I have told people who ask for lectures that I have no lecture to give. And that is true.

   

The world outside existed in a kind of darkness; and we inquired about nothing.

   

I came to London. It had become the center of my world and I had worked hard to come to it. And I was lost.

   

Whatever extra there is in me at any given moment isn't fully formed. I am hardly aware of it; it awaits the next book. It will - with luck - come to me during the actual writing, and it will take me by surprise.

   

The reason is that they define how I have gone about my business. I have trusted to intuition. I did it at the beginning. I do it even now. I have no idea how things might turn out, where in my writing I might go next.

   

But everything of value about me is in my books.

   

We made no inquiries about India or about the families people had left behind. When our ways of thinking had changed, and we wished to know, it was too late. I know nothing of the people on my father's side; I know only that some of them came from Nepal.

   

I will say I am the sum of my books.

   

Argentine political life is like the life of an ant community or an African forest tribe: full of events, full of crisis and deaths, but life is always cyclical, and the year ends as it begins.

   

I am the kind of writer that people think other people are reading.

   

The world is what it is; men who are nothing, who allow themselves to become nothing, have no place in it.

   

What was past was past. I suppose that was the general attitude.

   

It was a good place for getting lost in, a city no one ever knew, a city explored from the neutral heart outward, until after many years, it defined itself into a jumble of clearings separated by stretches of the unknown, through which the narrowest of paths had been cut.

   

The biography of a writer - or even the autobiography - will always have this incompleteness.

   

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