Paul Auster Quotes About Writing

We have collected for you the TOP of Paul Auster's best quotes about Writing! Here are collected all the quotes about Writing 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 52 sayings of Paul Auster about Writing. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • I think that sense of unreality inspired me to write the story within the book that [August] Brill tells himself, one of the stories he tells himself.

    Book   Writing   Thinking  
    Interview with Gregg LaGambina, www.avclub.com. September 6, 2008.
  • The ideal reader's the same, and I suppose this person has never had a face or a gender or an age. It's just some kind of unknown other who will be sympathetic and read each word carefully and understand what I'm writing about. I suppose every writer feels this.

    Writing  
    Interview with Lotte Hansen, www.timeout.com.
  • Writing is such a strange, utterly mysterious process. First, there was nothing; then, suddenly, there was something. I don't know where thoughts are born. Where the hell does it come from? I don't know. I really don't know.

    Writing  
  • All through my writing life I've had this impulse to write autobiographical works.

    Writing  
    "A Personal 'Report From The Interior' Of Author Paul Auster". "All Things Considered" with Arun Rath, www.npr.org. December 15, 2013.
  • While I was writing poems, I would often divert myself by reading detective novels, I liked them. And there was a period when I read many of them. I absorbed the form, and I liked it, it was a good one, mostly the hard-boiled school, you know, Chandler, Hammett, and their heirs. That was the direction that interested me most.

    Interview with Austin Allen, bigthink.com. November 5, 2009.
  • Writing is a solitary business. It takes over your life. In some sense, a writer has no life of his own. Even when he’s there, he’s not really there.

    Writing  
    Paul Auster (2008). “The New York Trilogy”, p.178, Faber & Faber
  • Writing is, after all, a gesture towards other people, giving something to others. And so it's not a completely hermetic exercise. It's really an opening up.

    Writing  
    Interview with Lotte Hansen, www.timeout.com.
  • In fact, writing, especially writing autobiographical works, and this is actually the fourth time I've done it, each time I've done it I've felt deeply immersed in the material as I'm doing it, and then it's over and everything is the same.

    Writing  
    Interview with Lotte Hansen, www.timeout.com.
  • I sometimes feel that my goal as a novelist would be to write a novel in which the language was so transparent that the reader would forget that language was the medium of understanding. Of course that's not possible, but it's some sort of idealized goal.

    Writing  
    "A Connoisseur of Clouds, a Meteorologist of Whims: The Rumpus Interview with Paul Auster". Interview with Juliet Linderman, therumpus.net. November 16, 2009.
  • There's a difference between doing memoir and writing a novel. If I had put the story of the boy killing my dog - and that was Eric also, what a little monster he was! - in a novel, even if I took it directly from life, it would be fiction.

    Writing  
    "An Interview with Paul Auster". Interview with Nathalie Cochoy and Sophie Vallas, transatlantica.revues.org. March 2014.
  • When the father dies, he writes, the son becomes his own father and his own son. He looks at is son and sees himself in the face of the boy. He imagines what the boy sees when he looks at him and finds himself becoming his own father. Inexplicably, he is moved by this. It is not just the sight of the boy that moves him, not even the thought of standing inside his father, but what he sees in the boy of his own vanished past. It is a nostalgia for his own life that he feels, perhaps, a memory of his own boyhood as a son to his father.

    Father  
    Paul Auster (2007). “The Invention of Solitude”, p.102, Penguin
  • My characters, I find them as I'm writing. It's quite incredible how fully realized they are in my mind, how many details I know about each of them.

    Writing  
    Paul Auster, James M. Hutchisson (2013). “Conversations with Paul Auster”, p.201, Univ. Press of Mississippi
  • There are two kinds of typical days. There's the typical day when I'm writing a novel, and there's the typical day when I'm not.

    Writing  
    "A Connoisseur of Clouds, a Meteorologist of Whims: The Rumpus Interview with Paul Auster". Interview with Juliet Linderman, therumpus.net. November 16, 2009.
  • Surely it is an odd way to spend your life - sitting alone in a room with a pen in your hand, hour after hour, day after day, year after year, struggling to put words on pieces of paper in order to give birth to what does not exist - except in your head. Why on earth would anyone want to do such a thing? The only answer I have ever been able to come up with is: because you have to, because you have no choice.

    Writing  
    "I want to tell you a story" by Paul Auster, www.theguardian.com. November 4, 2006.
  • I feel I'm discovering something new, a different rhythm, and I guess these rhythms have a lot to do with walking, too, but it's a longer trajectory now. I'm traveling greater distances with each sentence. But I don't write about walking that much anymore.

    Writing  
    Interview with Nathalie Cochoy and Sophie Vallas, transatlantica.revues.org. March 2014.
  • Nobody asks you to do this. The world out there is not panting after another novelist. We choose it

    Writing  
    "'I used to feel like people were trampling over me to get to my husband. I had print marks on my body'". Interview with Rachel Cooke, www.theguardian.com. May 24, 2008.
  • When I am writing, even though it's hard and I do struggle often, I am happier than when I'm not writing. I feel alive. Whereas when I'm not writing, I feel like your common every-day neurotic.

    Writing  
    "A Connoisseur of Clouds, a Meteorologist of Whims: The Rumpus Interview with Paul Auster". Interview with Juliet Linderman, therumpus.net. November 16, 2009.
  • I write different kinds of sentences, depending on what the book is, and what the project is. I see my work evolving. I'm writing long sentences now, something I didn't use to do. I had some kind of breakthrough, five or six years ago, in Invisible, and in Sunset Park after that. I discovered a new way to write sentences. And I find it exhilarating.

    Book   Writing  
    Interview with Nathalie Cochoy and Sophie Vallas, transatlantica.revues.org. March 2014.
  • A book, at the same time, also has to do with what I call a buzz in the head. It's a certain kind of music that I start hearing. It's the music of the language, but it's also the music of the story. I have to live with that music for a while before I can put any words on the page. I think that's because I have to get my body as much as my mind accustomed to the music of writing that particular book. It really is a mysterious feeling.

    Book   Writing   Thinking  
    Source: www.interviewmagazine.com
  • I started out in life as a poet, I was only writing poetry all through my 20s, it wasn't until I was about 30 that I got serious about writing prose. While I was writing poems, I would often divert myself by reading detective novels, I liked them.

    "Big Think Interview With Paul Auster". Interviewed with Austin Allen, bigthink.com. November 5, 2009.
  • As a poet or a novelist or a painter, you are pushing yourself all the time, always looking for a new way to approach something, challenging yourself and never, never trying to write the same book twice.

    Book   Writing  
    Paul Auster, James M. Hutchisson (2013). “Conversations with Paul Auster”, p.199, Univ. Press of Mississippi
  • The pen will never be able to move fast enough to write down every word discovered in the space of memory. Some things have been lost forever, other things will perhaps be remembered again, and still other things have been lost and found and lost again. There is no way to be sure of any this.

    Writing  
    Paul Auster (2011). “Collected Prose”, p.193, Faber & Faber
  • 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.
  • After something crystallizes, I can write ferociously and write novels in six months, which in the past would have taken me two years.

    Taken   Writing  
    Paul Auster, James M. Hutchisson (2013). “Conversations with Paul Auster”, p.201, Univ. Press of Mississippi
  • Once you finish a book, it doesn't belong to you anymore. You're giving it to other people. If something in what a writer writes can excite the imagination and the feelings of the reader, then that reader carries it around forever. Nothing is more vivid than good fiction.

    Book   Writing   People  
    Source: www.interviewmagazine.com
  • Writing begins in the body, it is the music of the body, and even if the words have meaning, can sometimes have meaning, the music of the words is where the meanings begin....Writing as a lesser form of dance.

    Writing  
  • When I write, the story is always uppermost in my mind, and I feel that everything must be sacrificed to it. All elegant passages, all the curious details, all the so-called beautiful writing - if they are not truly relevant to what I am trying to say, then they have to go.

    Writing  
    Paul Auster, James M. Hutchisson (2013). “Conversations with Paul Auster”, p.11, Univ. Press of Mississippi
  • The mental state I'm in is completely different, but the act of trying to write is the same. I mean, in all instances you try to write good sentences. But in a novel you're free to do whatever you want, and in the autobiographical works you can't make things up.

    Writing  
    Interview with Nathalie Cochoy and Sophie Vallas, transatlantica.revues.org. March 2014.
  • I would say that Edgar Allan Poe, [Georges] Perec, Thomas Pynchon, and [Jorge Luis] Borges are all boy-writers. These are writers who take... a kind of demonic joy in writing.

    Writing  
    "An Interview with Paul Auster". Interview with Nathalie Cochoy and Sophie Vallas, transatlantica.revues.org. March 2014.
  • To care about words, to have a stake in what is written, to believe in the power of books - this overwhelms the rest, and beside it one's life becomes very small.

    Book   Writing  
    Paul Auster (2008). “The New York Trilogy”, p.225, Faber & Faber
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