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Diane Johnson Quotes

1.
A chaplain's biggest gift is to be present and just listen.
Diane Johnson

2.
But novels are never about what they are about; that is, there is always deeper, or more general, significance. The author may not be aware of this till she is pretty far along with it. A novel's whole pattern is rarely apparent at the outset of writing, or even at the end; that is when the writer finds out what a novel is about, and the job becomes one of understanding and deepening or sharpening what is already written. That is finding the theme.
Diane Johnson

3.
Statuettes of drunken sailors, velvet pictures of island maidens, plastic seashell lamps made in Taiwan. What contempt the people who think up souvenirs have for other people.
Diane Johnson

4.
Not having to own a car has made me realize what a waste of time the automobile is.
Diane Johnson

5.
Women have the feeling that since they didn't make the rules, the rules have nothing to do with them.
Diane Johnson

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.
Laughter is the jam on the toast of life. It adds flavor, keeps it from being too dry, and makes it easier to swallow.
Diane Johnson

7.
...is this not in fact the purpose of young Americans going abroad? To make them think of things they never thought of?
Diane Johnson

8.
The whole process of writing a novel is having this great, beautiful idea and then spoiling it.
Diane Johnson

Quote Topics by Diane Johnson: Thinking Writing Novel Ideas Brave Person Purpose Persons Work May Waste Chaplains Wasting Time Witty Add Islands Understanding Crafts Beautiful Mouths Facts Frail Significance Feelings Just Listen Car Jam Wicked Laughter Travel Jobs
9.
In what we think of as bad dialogue, the characters talk directly to each other.
Diane Johnson

10.
Glenda Adams has written a wicked and witty novel.
Diane Johnson

11.
But novels are never about what they are about; that is, there is always deeper, or more general, significance. The author may not be aware of this till she is pretty far along with it.
Diane Johnson

12.
Any essayist setting out on a frail apparatus of notings and jottings is a brave person.
Diane Johnson

13.
The Novelist, afraid his ideas may be foolish, slyly puts them in the mouth of some other fool and reserves the right to disavow them.
Diane Johnson