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Chelsea Quinn Yarbro Quotes

1.
I ride horseback - arthritic knees permitting - or listen to opera. Sometimes I cook. I used to do needlework, but it's hard on my hands now, so I only do it occasionally, but I like it. And, of course, I read.
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

2.
Storylines are how characters create the plots involved in their stories.
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

3.
Very few editors worry about heresy - their goals are much too commercial, thank goodness.
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

4.
I think it is probably more important to attend specialized conventions for a journeyman writer than any other, but it's useful at all stages of a career, if for nothing else, to find out how the industry is working at any given time.
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

5.
Common folk didn't have last names in the 8th and 9th centuries.
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

Similar Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson William Shakespeare Donald Trump Mahatma Gandhi Barack Obama Rush Limbaugh Henry David Thoreau Friedrich Nietzsche Mark Twain Rajneesh Cassandra Clare C. S. Lewis Albert Einstein Oscar Wilde Thomas Jefferson
6.
Providing a writer isn't put off by conventions - and some are - attending them can be a nice break from the necessary isolation of writing.
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

7.
Art goes into the world unarmed, vulnerable to every quirk of fate, and it must survive only by its power to move men not to destroy it.
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

8.
If they aren't real enough to surprise me, then they aren't real enough to go on the page.
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

Quote Topics by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro: Real Writing Knees Ghouls Fate Common Folk Moving Names Stories Careers Isolation Pages Two Lists Goal Opera Vampire Hands Philosophy Art Lasts Plot Time Character Thinking Nice Goes On Giving Editors Pay
9.
Isn't that an odd philosophy for a vampire?
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

10.
I'm not a good collaborator in general.
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

11.
When you're a mid-list writer, it pays to write fast.
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

12.
I outline fairly extensively because I'm usually dealing with real events. I don't need to give myself as much information as I used to, but I still like to have two pages of outline for every projected 100 pages of manuscript.
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro