1.
Aphorisms are bad for novels. They stick in the reader's teeth.
Anatole Broyard
2.
The contents of someone's bookcase are part of his history, like an ancestral portrait.
Anatole Broyard
3.
To be misunderstood can be the writer's punishment for having disturbed the reader's peace. The greater the disturbance, the greater the possibility of misunderstanding.
Anatole Broyard
4.
If a book is really good, it deserves to be read again, and if it's great, it should be read at least three times.
Anatole Broyard
5.
In an age like ours, which is not given to letter-writing, we forget what an important part it used to play in people's lives.
Anatole Broyard
6.
Rome was a poem pressed into service as a city.
Anatole Broyard
7.
Travel is like adultery: one is always tempted to be unfaithful to one's own country. To have imagination is inevitably to be dissatisfied with where you live. There is in men, as Peter Quennell said, "a centrifugal tendency." In our wanderlust, we are lovers looking for consummation.
Anatole Broyard
8.
The first divorce in the world may have been a tragedy, but the hundred-millionth is not necessarily one.
Anatole Broyard
9.
A bookcase is as good as a view, as much of a panorama as the sight of a city or a river. There are dawns and sunsets in books - storms and zephyrs.
Anatole Broyard
10.
The more I like a book, the more reluctant I am to turn the page. Lovers, even book lovers, tend to cling. No one-night stands or "reads" for them.
Anatole Broyard
11.
There are few things more subtly distressing than an inappropriate gift from someone close to you.
Anatole Broyard
12.
The tension between 'yes' and no', between 'I can' and 'I cannot,' makes us feel that, in so many instances, human life is an interminable debate with one's self.
Anatole Broyard
13.
It is one of the paradoxes of American literature that our writers are forever looking back with love and nostalgia at lives they couldn't wait to leave.
Anatole Broyard
14.
We are all tourists in history, and irony is what we win in wars.
Anatole Broyard
15.
When friends stop being frank and useful to each other, the whole world loses some of its radiance.
Anatole Broyard
16.
Either a writer doesn't want to talk about his work, or he talks about it more than you want.
Anatole Broyard
17.
A book is meant not only to be read, but to haunt you, to importune you like a lover or a parent, to be in your teeth like a piece of gristle.
Anatole Broyard
18.
To choose a writer for a friend is like palling around with your cardiologist, who might be musing as you talk to him that you are a sinking man. A writer's love for another writer is never quite free of malice. He may enjoy discussing your failures even more than you do. He probably sees you as tragic, like his characters - or unworthy of tragedy, which is worse.
Anatole Broyard
19.
The epic implications of being human end in more than this: We start our lives as if they were momentous stories, with a beginning, a middle and an appropriate end, only to find that they are mostly middles.
Anatole Broyard
20.
There was a time when we expected nothing of our children but obedience, as opposed to the present, when we expect everything of them but obedience.
Anatole Broyard
21.
Sex almost always disappoints me in novels. Everything can be said or done now, and that's what I often find: everything, a feeling of generality or dispersal. But in my experience, true sex is so particular, so peculiar to the person who yearns for it. Only he or she, and no one else, would desire so very much that very person under those circumstances. In fiction, I miss that sense of terrific specificity.
Anatole Broyard
22.
In novels, I said, people are transfigured by love. They’re elevated, made different, lifted out of their ordinariness…It’s not so much to ask, I said. I just want love to live up to its publicity.
Anatole Broyard
23.
I remember a table in BarchesterTowers that had more character than the combined heroes of three recent novels I've read.
Anatole Broyard
24.
Chic is a convent for unloved women.
Anatole Broyard
25.
An aphorism is a generalization of sorts, and our present-day writers seem more at home with the particular.
Anatole Broyard
26.
People ... have no idea what a hard job it is for two writers to be friends. Sooner or later you have to talk about each other's work.
Anatole Broyard
27.
Two people making love, she once said, are like one drowned person resuscitating the other.
Anatole Broyard
28.
For years they have been using the role of 'sex object' as a cover while they spied out the land.
Anatole Broyard
29.
We don't simply read books. We become them.
Anatole Broyard
30.
Ruefulness is one of the classical tones of American fiction. It fosters a native, deglamorized form of anxiety.
Anatole Broyard
31.
Paranoids are the only ones who notice things anymore.
Anatole Broyard
32.
There is something about seeing real people on a stage that makes a bad play more intimately, more personally offensive than any other art form.
Anatole Broyard
33.
The moment a book is lent I begin to miss it.
Anatole Broyard
34.
A whole generation of writers dined out on the dialectic between original cultures and their culture by "progress.
Anatole Broyard
35.
The more I like a book, the more slowly I read. this spontaneous talking back to a book is one of the things that makes reading so valuable.
Anatole Broyard
36.
I feel about lending a book the way most fathers feel about their daughters living with a man out of wedlock.
Anatole Broyard
37.
Sometimes it seems that we might have been happier if we had once had an aristocracy to blame everything on.
Anatole Broyard