Anna Quindlen Reading Quotations
Anna Quindlen Quotes about:
Reading Quotes from:
- All Reading Quotes
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Henry David Thoreau
- C S Lewis
- Neil Gaiman
- Virginia Woolf
- Alberto Manguel
- John Green
- Samuel Johnson
- Daniel Handler
- Stephen King
- Ray Bradbury
- Thomas Jefferson
- Margaret Atwood
- Mason Cooley
- Anna Quindlen
- Dave Barry
- Haruki Murakami
- Jeanette Winterson
- Joyce Carol Oates
- Nick Hornby
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Dream Quotes
How is it that, a full two centuries after Jane Austen finished her manuscript, we come to the world of Pride and Prejudice and find ourselves transcending customs, strictures, time, mores, to arrive at a place that educates, amuses, and enthralls us? It is a miracle. We read in bed because reading is halfway between life and dreaming, our own consciousness in someone else's mind.
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Book Quotes
Reading has always been life unwrapped to me, a way of understanding the world and understanding myself through both the unknown and the everyday. If being a parent consists often of passing along chunks of ourselves to unwitting-often unwilling-recipients, then books are, for me, one of the simplest and most sure-fire ways of doing that.
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Writing Quotes
Uncontrollable consumerism has become a watchword of our culture despite regular and compelling calls for its end. The United States has more malls than high schools; Americans spend more time shopping than reading. ... Some of the most insightful writing about the American character over the nation's history has been about neither freedom nor democracy but about the crazed impulse to acquire things.
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Book Quotes
Reading has always been my home, my sustenance, my great invincible companion. "Book love," Trollope called it. "It will make your hours pleasant to you as long as you live." Yet of all the many things in which we recognize some universal comfort...reading seems to be the one in which the comfort is most undersung...
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Growing Up Quotes
While we pay lip service to the virtues of reading, the truth is that there is still in our culture something that suspects those who read too much, whatever reading too much means, of being lazy, aimless dreamers, people who need to grow up and come outside to where real life is, who think themselves superior in their separateness.