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Jayne Anne Phillips Quotes

1.
Towns change; they grow or diminish, but hometowns remain as we left them.
Jayne Anne Phillips

Villages evolve; they swell or dwindle, but places of origin stay as we left them.
2.
Literature can teach us how to live before we live, and how to die before we die. I believe that writing is practice for death, and for every (other) transformation human beings encounter.
Jayne Anne Phillips

3.
Love is the outlaw's duty.
Jayne Anne Phillips

4.
If death is this brilliant slide, this high, fine music felt as pure vibration, this plunging float in wind and silence, it's not so bad.
Jayne Anne Phillips

5.
The writing life is a secret life, wither we admit it or not.
Jayne Anne Phillips

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.
If all stories are fiction, fiction can be true -- not in detail or fact, but in some transformed version of feeling. If there is a memory of paradise, paradise can exist, in some other place or country dimensionally reminiscent of our own. The sad stories live there too, but in that country, we know what they mean and why they happened. We make our way back from them, finding the way through a bountiful wilderness we begin to understand. Years are nothing: Story conquers all distance.
Jayne Anne Phillips

7.
Talk between women friends is always therapy.
Jayne Anne Phillips

8.
Then he's inside you, and your body remembers, each time, every man, even if you try to forget.
Jayne Anne Phillips

Quote Topics by Jayne Anne Phillips: Writing Silence Hometown Weight Grows Moving Morality Believe War Firsts Fall Wind Sight Body Life Is Trying Outlaw Distance Love Is Country Wish Towns Sound Practice Air Loyalty Light Years Vibrations Listening
9.
The writer's first affinity is not to a loyalty, a tradition, a morality, a religion, but to life itself, and to its representation in language.
Jayne Anne Phillips

10.
I write line by line, by the sound and the weight and the music of the words.
Jayne Anne Phillips

11.
I wish I had more time to write.
Jayne Anne Phillips

12.
As before, there is a great silence, with no end in sight. The writer surrenders, listening.
Jayne Anne Phillips

13.
When the year turns, there are bells on the wind. All the old years fall on the ground in lights.
Jayne Anne Phillips

14.
Smoke veils the air like souls in drifting suspension, declining the war's insistence everyone move on.
Jayne Anne Phillips