Paul Auster Quotes About Winter

We have collected for you the TOP of Paul Auster's best quotes about Winter! Here are collected all the quotes about Winter starting from the birthday of the Author – February 3, 1947! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 10 sayings of Paul Auster about Winter. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • I don't have all the facts. And I might misremember. As a matter of fact, after I finished Winter Journal, I realized that I'd gotten someone's name wrong.

    Interview with Nathalie Cochoy and Sophie Vallas, transatlantica.revues.org. March 2014.
  • What I'm trying to do [in Winter Journal] is to tell the story of a man's life from birth, but there are different versions of him, four different versions.

    Interview with Nathalie Cochoy and Sophie Vallas for Transatlantica, transatlantica.revues.org. March 2014.
  • When the publisher here in America wanted to put the word "memoir" on the title page [of 'Winter Journal'] and on the cover, I said, "No, no, no, no, no, no." No genre whatsoever. It's an independent work not really connected to those things at all.

    Interview with Wayne Gooderham, www.timeout.com.
  • I thought, "Well, I'm writing about early childhood, so maybe it would make sense to write about late childhood as well, early adulthood." Those were my thoughts, and this was how this crazy book [Winter Journal] was composed. I've never seen a book with pictures like at the end, pictures related to things you've read before.

    Book   Writing  
    Interview with Nathalie Cochoy, Sophie Vallas, transatlantica.revues.org. March 2014.
  • My children haven't read 'Winter Journal'. They have read some of my work, but I really don't foist it on them. I want them to be free to discover it in their own good time. I think reading an intimate memoir by your father - or an intimate autobiographical work, whatever we want to call this thing - you have to come at it at the right moment, so I'm certainly not foisting it upon them.

    Source: www.timeout.com
  • I have to say in premise 'Winter Journal' is really not a memoir. And I don't even think of it as an autobiography. I think of it as a literary composition - similar to music - composed of autobiographical fragments. I'm really not telling the story of my life in a coherent narrative form.

    Time Out Interview, www.timeout.com.
  • Autobiographical writings, essays, interviews, various other things... All the non-fiction prose I wanted to keep, that was the idea behind this collected volume, which came out about few years ago. I didn't think of Winter Journal, for example, as an autobiography, or a memoir. What it is is a literary work, composed of autobiographical fragments, but trying to attain, I hope, the effect of music.

    Interview with Nathalie Cochoy, Sophie Vallas, transatlantica.revues.org. March 2014.
  • I say at the very end of "Winter Journal" that I do dream about my father often. I think I have a tremendous compassion for him, which has grown over the years. A certain kind of pity for him also in that he was so unrealised as a human being, so dogged, and so shut-off from people in many ways. You know, I've been writing another book, and it's another non-fiction autobiographical work, kind of a compliment to "Winter Journal", and it's just finished.

    Father   Book  
    Interview with Wayne Gooderham, www.timeout.com.
  • I wrote Report from the Interior was that after I finished Winter Journal, I took a pause, and I realized there was more I wanted to say.

    Interview with Nathalie Cochoy and Sophie Vallas, transatlantica.revues.org. March 2014.
  • For example, when I was writing Leviathan, which was written both in New York and in Vermont - I think there were two summers in Vermont, in that house I wrote about in Winter Journal, that broken-down house... I was working in an out-building, a kind of shack, a tumble-down, broken-down mess of a place, and I had a green table. I just thought, "Well, is there a way to bring my life into the fiction I'm writing, will it make a difference?" And the fact is, it doesn't make any difference. It was a kind of experiment which couldn't fail.

    Writing  
    Interview with Nathalie Cochoy and Sophie Vallas, transatlantica.revues.org. March 2014.
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