Garner's Quotations

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Garner's Quotations Page 12

by Dwight Garner


  Those who would reject you because you are wearing the wrong shoes are not worth being accepted by.

  —Salman Rushdie, Joseph Anton

  What was “Cinderella,” if not an allegory for the fundamental unhappiness of shoe shopping?

  —Elif Batuman, The Idiot

  To the disinterested, a foot fetishist is ridiculous; right away you imagine a pathetic cringer who works at Thom McAn.

  —Mary Gaitskill, Somebody with a Little Hammer

  I find it hard to relax around any man who’s got the second button on his shirt undone.

  —Bill Nighy

  Love me, love my dirty shirt.

  —James Joyce, Ulysses

  History’s meant to be a bummer, not a stroll down memory lane.

  —Simon Schama, on Downton Abbey

  Understanding the past requires pretending that you don’t know the present.

  —Paul Fussell, Thank God for the Atom Bomb

  It is difficult at times to repress the thought that history is about as instructive as an abattoir.

  —Seamus Heaney, Nobel Prize lecture

  The sex act cruelly mimics history’s decline and fall.

  —Camille Paglia, Sexual Personae

  The past is always tense and the future, perfect.

  —Zadie Smith, White Teeth

  The great drive-in screen of the future.

  —Gish Jen, Who’s Irish?

  Have you decided yet what historical moment you would have most like to have witnessed with your own eyes and ears?

  —Padgett Powell, The Interrogative Mood

  It’s a form of terrorism not to bomb this town.

  —Lorrie Moore, A Gate at the Stairs

  Are you not the color of this country’s current threat

  Advisory?

  —Terrance Hayes, American Sonnets for My Past and Future Assassin

  Do you periodically walk around and check to see that “the area is secure”?

  —Padgett Powell, The Interrogative Mood

  Terror, no need to add,

  Depends on who’s wearing the hood.

  —Roger Woddis, “Ethics for Everyman”

  If Americans experience sublimity

  the terrorists have won.

  —Ben Lerner, “Mad Lib Elegy”

  I used to think it was possible for an artist to alter the inner life of the culture. Now bomb-makers and gunmen have taken that territory.

  —Don DeLillo, Mao II

  —Fatwa sex?

  —The best sex there is.

  —Larry David and Salman Rushdie, Curb Your Enthusiasm

  Charming friends need not possess minds.

  —Muriel Spark, All the Stories of Muriel Spark

  We cherish our friends not for their ability to amuse us, but for ours to amuse them.

  —Evelyn Waugh

  We do whatever we can to make the other one feel famous.

  —Sheila Heti, How Should a Person Be?

  If you want your book to get a bad review, have a friend do it.

  —Christopher Ricks, Dylan’s Visions of Sin

  I don’t read my reviews, I measure them.

  —Attributed to Joseph Conrad and Arnold Bennett

  Class! Yes, it’s still here. Terrific staying power, and against all the historical odds.

  —Martin Amis, London Fields

  Class warfare is one of the few interesting or worthwhile areas of politics, of course, keeping the rich on their toes and giving the poor something to think about.

  —Auberon Waugh, The Diaries of Auberon Waugh

  I’d like to see you move up to the goat-class where I think you belong.

  —Philip K. Dick, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?

  All love is socioeconomic. It’s the gradients in status that make arousal possible.

  —Gary Shteyngart, The Russian Debutante’s Handbook

  [His public school accent] got on my tits like anything.

  —Angela Carter

  Her accent alone burned a hole in my lower intestines.

  —Peter Orner, Maggie Brown and Others

  Let’s buy a castle and murder King Duncan and settle down.

  —John Updike, Bech Is Back

  If you want a piece of property to go downhill, just leave it in the care of a bunch of word people.

  —Madeleine Blais, To the New Owners

  The simple question “What color do you want to paint that upstairs room?” might, if we follow things to their logical conclusions, be stated: “How do I live, knowing that I will one day die and leave you?”

  —Donald Antrim, The Verificationist

  There’s nothing that irritates me so much as paying rent.

  —Iris Murdoch, Under the Net

  One square foot less and it would be adulterous.

  —Robert Benchley, on an office shared with Dorothy Parker

  You’ve got to lie to stay halfway interested in yourself.

  —Barry Hannah

  A lie may fool someone else, but it tells you the truth: you’re weak.

  —Tom Wolfe, The Bonfire of the Vanities

  I expect you’ve got a lot of those goddam maple trees doing their stuff over there.

  —Iris Murdoch, Living on Paper

  All the trees had dropped acid.

  —Raymond Mungo, Total Loss Farm

  Show me a woman who cries when the trees lose their leaves in autumn and I’ll show you a real asshole.

  —Nora Ephron, Heartburn

  I say reject both [poems]. The Poplar one is just another tree one to me and, so help me God, I’m for a moratorium on trees for two or three years.

  —Harold Ross, Letters from the Editor

  The best things in life are free. The second best are very, very expensive.

  —Coco Chanel, attributed

  The rule is not to talk about money with people who have much more or much less than you.

  —Katharine Whitehorn

  It’s really hard to be roommates with people if your suitcases are much better than theirs.

  —J. D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye

  Thank you for this night like a bag of yellow Doritos.

  —Veronica Geng, Love Trouble Is My Business

  Fritos are so nutritious.

  —Marianne Moore, to Donald Hall

  The greatest meal of my life involved a Triscuit.

  —Jonathan Miles, “A Taste for the Hunt”

  Has anybody noticed that we haven’t won a game since we ate that chicken á la king?

  —Jim Bouton, Ball Four

  I thank God I am a man of low tastes.

  —Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

  If you happen to catch … me in a low dive my excuse is simple: “I’m writing a book.”

  —Leonard R. N. Ashley, “The Cockney’s Hornbook”

  Bring us a basin! We’re going to be sick!

  —Roald Dahl, Matilda

  Shelley just barfed on a Dodge Colt with a Wellesley College window decal.

  —Susan Orlean, Saturday Night

  He seems to be vomiting someone’s taupe pajamas.

  —Don DeLillo, Underworld

  Puking seems to have perked you up.

  —Yasmina Reza, God of Carnage

  Vomit is passionate.

  —Norman Mailer, Cannibals and Christians

  Cough it up, man. Get it out in bits.

  —James Joyce, Ulysses

  You can’t really dust for vomit.

  —This Is Spinal Tap

  Bee vomit, he said once

  that’s all honey is.

  —Rita Dove, “In the Old Neighborhood”

  Good greaser vomit! Pablo digs good greaser vomit!

  —Terry Southern, Red-Dirt Marijuana

  I want to rise so high that when I shit I won’t miss anybody.

  —William H. Gass, In the Heart of the Heart of the Country

  I became a journalist partly so that I wouldn’t ever have to rely on th
e press for my information.

  —Christopher Hitchens, Hitch-22

  You may not be able to change the world, but at least you can embarrass the guilty.

  —Jessica Mitford

  We like to appear in the newspapers

  So long as we are in the right column.

  —T. S. Eliot, The Family Reunion

  Then shall we be news-crammed.

  —William Shakespeare, As You Like It

  One reason cats are happier than people

  is that they have no newspapers.

  —Gwendolyn Brooks, In the Mecca

  You are not a nice boy, David … Stick to the wicked.

  —Philip Roth, to David Hare, about Hare’s work

  It’s not your fate to be well treated, Ignatius cried. You’re an overt masochist. Nice treatment will confuse and destroy you.

  —John Kennedy Toole, A Confederacy of Dunces

  Between two evils, I always pick the one I have never tried before.

  —Mae West

  Red or white?

  —The three most depressing words in the English language, according to Kingsley Amis

  My idea of a fine wine was one that merely stained your teeth without stripping the enamel.

  —Clive James

  Black Boy,

  beware of wine labels,

  for the Republic does not guarantee

  what the phrase “Château Bottled” means.

  —Melvin B. Tolson, “PSI”

  I don’t like my wine in capsules.

  —Gioacchino Rossini, on grapes

  I wish we had some more glasses of arbor vitae.

  —James Joyce, Finnegans Wake

  Half the world is redoing its kitchens, the other half is starving.

  —Don DeLillo, Zero K

  We weren’t poor, we just didn’t have any money.

  —Thomas Hart Benton, attributed

  A way of keeping yourself feeling rich and civilized even when you’re quite poor.

  —Marie Ponsot, on reading poetry

  The rich can afford to be virtuous, the poor must shift as best they can.

  —Angela Carter, The Sadeian Woman

  That is one of the bitter curses of poverty; it leaves no right to be generous.

  —George Gissing

  I make a lunge for the dollar, the eagle flies in the opposite direction.

  —Charles Wright, The Messenger

  He calls them shithawks.

  —Lucia Perillo, on eagles, quoting a friend, “Serotonin”

  When I hear a man talk of Sound Finance, I know him for an enemy of the people.

  —Hyde Park orator, in Geoffrey Madan’s Notebooks

  He did not follow the fat gods.

  —Saul Bellow

  Never trust a fart. Never pass up a drink. Never ignore an erection.

  —Walter Cronkite’s rules for old men, via Roger Angell

  The Queen’s fart.

  —Silent method of opening a champagne bottle

  An imperfectly suppressed fart.

  —John Barth, on what the word “spoof” sounds like

  I remember you, you came in my mouth and it tasted like strawberries.

  —Jim Carroll, The Basketball Diaries

  He looked up from his fried chicken and said, I just want to die with a big dick in my mouth.

  —David Wojnarowicz, Close to the Knives

  The trouble with this country is that a man can live his entire life without knowing whether or not he is a coward.

  —John Berryman, to James Dickey

  Every man thinks meanly of himself for not having been a soldier, or not having been at sea.

  —Samuel Johnson

  I like a look of Agony,

  Because I know it’s true.

  —Emily Dickinson

  When I died they washed me out of the turret with a hose.

  —Randall Jarrell, “The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner”

  This Room and This Gin and These Sandwiches

  —Edmund Wilson, play title

  Gin thou wert mine awn thing.

  —John Gay, The Beggar’s Opera

  I’m Saving My Blackheads for You

  —Loudon Wainwright III, song title

  My lungs are thick with the smoke

  of your absence.

  —Raymond Carver, “A Forge, and a Scythe”

  Your body is opium and you are its only true smoker.

  —Brenda Shaughnessy, “Your One Good Dress”

  I was the kind of pothead who looked like a small cloud being propelled by a pair of legs.

  —Clive James, Latest Readings

  When I was a kid, I inhaled frequently. That was the point.

  —Barack Obama

  No smoking in bars. What next, no fucking in bars?

  —Kim Cattrall, in Sex in the City

  Even the smell of tobacco made a man more rational.

  —Aravind Adiga, Amnesty

  Then, worst of all, the anxious thought,

  Each time my plane begins to sink

  And the No Smoking sign comes on:

  What will there be to drink?

  —W. H. Auden, “On the Circuit”

  Smokeless and breadless, we face a bad weekend.

  —Dylan Thomas, Selected Letters of Dylan Thomas

  If there is hope, wrote Winston, it lies in the proles.

  —George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four

  Fred Astaire represents the aristocracy when he dances, and I represent the proletariat.

  —Gene Kelly

  We can’t all be proletarians, you know.

  —Dwight Macdonald, letter

  Reverse snobbery, unlike the traditional kind, is a tribute to democracy—it’s egalitarianism overshooting the mark.

  —Michael Kinsley, “O’Reilly Among the Snobs”

  My place comfortable in the lowerarchy.

  —A. R. Ammons, “Hibernaculum”

  Where do people like us live?

  —Bruce Springsteen’s parents, to a gas station attendant, upon arriving in California, in his Born to Run

  But the peasants. How do the peasants die?

  —Leo Tolstoy’s last words, attributed

  Haven’t you noticed that every time the government fucks up McDonald’s has a new sandwich?

  —Bill Burr

  The last thing I ever wanted was to be alive when the three most powerful men on the whole planet would be named Bush, Dick and Colon.

  —Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., A Man Without a Country

  No baby knows when the nipple is pulled from his mouth for the last time.

  —Jonathan Safran Foer, Here I Am

  My nipples are like the teats of a rain-god.

  —Jeanette Winterson, Frankissstein

  The majesty of a nipple not yet touched.

  —A. R. Ammons, “The Gathering”

  The Nipple.

  —What regulars call the NYPL (New York Public Library)

  For manual workers nipples are a trial. One has to sandpaper the hauns before going to bed with one’s woman.

  —James Kelman, You Have to Be Careful in the Land of the Free

  I think he’s a natural playwright. He writes by sanded fingertips.

  —Lillian Hellman, on Tennessee Williams

  People who like quotes love meaningless generalizations.

  —Graham Greene

  Life itself is a quotation.

  —Jorge Luis Borges

  One has to secrete a jelly in which to slip quotations down people’s throats and one always secretes too much jelly.

  —Virginia Woolf

  They dug each other’s references and felt smarter in each other’s presence.

  —Chris Kraus, I Love Dick

  What is that unforgettable line?

  —Samuel Beckett, Happy Days

  It is invariably oneself that one collects.

  —Jean Baudrillard

  The premonition of apocalypse springs ete
rnal in the human breast.

  —Irving Kristol, On the Democratic Idea in America

  Who opens the morning papers without the wild hope of huge headlines announcing another great disaster? Provided of course that it affects other people and not oneself.

  —Iris Murdoch, A Fairly Honourable Defeat

  A sliver off the comet of the American chaos had come loose.

  —Philip Roth, American Pastoral

  I just like people with some Looney Tune in their souls.

  —Lester Bangs, Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung

  They don’t have any gizzards. We had gizzards, man.

  —Roy Blount Jr., quoting Dwight White of the Pittsburgh Steelers on the bland teams that followed his, About Three Bricks Shy: And the Load Filled Up

  Those whom the Gods wish to destroy, they probably begin by calling “charismatic.”

  —Christopher Hitchens, And Yet

  I’m an alcoholic, goddamn it!

  —Dwight Macdonald, when asked why he drank so much, A Moral Temper: The Letters of Dwight Macdonald

  I hereby charge and assert that the testy but lovable Boswell who annotates by old laundry slips, Dwight Macdonald, drinks tea.

  —Tom Wolfe, letter to the editor, in The New York Review of Books

  The fact is you’re a shocking wreck.

  —Franz Wright, “Alcohol”

  Hubcap ripping and parked-car creeping, dime-store clipping and window peeping.

  —Chuck Berry, on petty crime, The Autobiography

  I love the con, crises are my fuel.

  —Clancy Sigal, Black Sunset

  Faint heart never fucked a pig.

  —Philip Prowse, attributed

  Why not steal a fish from the market to make you bolder?

  —Deborah Levy, Hot Milk

  Don’t buy. Steal. If you act like it’s yours, no one will ask you to pay for it.

  —Jerry Rubin, Do It

  Nobody steals books but your friends.

  —Roger Zelazny, The Guns of Avalon

  My friends have signed copies of my books that I did not sign.

  —Gabriel García Márquez, The Scandal of the Century

  There are no innocent bystanders. What are they doing there in the first place?

  —William S. Burroughs, My Education

  Somebody always leaves a banana-skin on the scene of a tragedy.

  —Graham Greene, Our Man in Havana

  If you want to know who your friends are, get yourself a jail sentence.

  —Charles Bukowski, Notes of a Dirty Old Man

  My friends don’t seem to be friends at all but people whose phone numbers I haven’t lost.

  —Nick Hornby, High Fidelity

  How many women can you butt-dial in one evening!

  —Frederick Seidel, “Abusers”

  Should I have butt implants? Are my tits pointing in the right direction?

 

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