1.
If he acts, if he doesn't, it's meaningless. The whole thing goes forward. No one is important. No one at all.
Jesse Ball
2.
First, he says, you have to go out into the world. This is not a simple matter of going outside one's door. No, that is simply going out. That's what one does when one is on the way to the store to buy a loaf of bread, some cheese, and a bottle of wine. When one goes out into the world, one is shedding preconceptions of past paths and ideas of past paths, and trying to move freely through an unsubstantiated and new geography.
Jesse Ball
3.
Not that believing such things has anything to do with whether they are true. You see that, don't you?
Jesse Ball
4.
I'm an elephant today. I will need to have lots of room and also a bowl of water on the floor.
Jesse Ball
5.
I believe in discovering the love that exists and then trying to understand it. Not to invent a love and try to make it exist, but to find what does exist, and then to see what it is.
Jesse Ball
6.
Sunday was always the best of days for being the self you had intended to be, but were not, for one reason or another.
Jesse Ball
7.
I believe my friends think I'm funny. All the books are full of humor. Maybe it is a quiet sort of humor that masquerades as not-much-at-all. It is certainly easy to miss.
Jesse Ball
8.
Three things are required of you: the wishes you made when you first knew the breadth of this life; the contract you signed when you decided your wishes were not true or possible; and the exacting of the punishment you agreed to when you knew you would break the contract of your life.
Jesse Ball
9.
I like small books. I like durable books. I like plain books. I like small type and thin pages.
Jesse Ball
10.
I don't read books for pleasure, but in desperation.
Jesse Ball
11.
In searching for a way out of my own troubles, I had found my way into the troubles of others, some long gone, and now I was trying to find my way back out, through their troubles, as if we human beings can ever learn from one another.
Jesse Ball
12.
We tire differently if we love or love not.
Jesse Ball
13.
I'm confused, and brilliant books help me to be less so.
Jesse Ball
14.
That would be the death of anyone - to recognize false hopes with a certainty. One mustn't know that. If it is offered, refuse!
Jesse Ball
15.
The old man began to sing. His voice was very lovely and obviously a part of something that the world had disposed of in its haste, evidence of a grander, kinder past.
Jesse Ball
16.
One can't say how one behaved or why, really. Such situations, they are far more complex than any either/or proposition. It is simplistic to produce events in pairs and lean them against each other like cards. I suppose if you a playing go or shogi, then such a thing might be helpful, but that is not life.
Jesse Ball
17.
I have a very basic notion of the structure the book might have - that's mostly it. The rest is luck and happenstance.
Jesse Ball
18.
It is at the heart of our human enterprise, that is to say, at the heart of society, to allow consensus a power it ought not to have.
Jesse Ball
19.
…There are times when something is asked of us, and we find we must do it. There is no calculation involved, no measure of the necessity of the thing itself, the action that must be performed. There is simply an acknowledgment that we will do the thing in question, and then the thing is done, often at considerable personal cost. " "What goes into these decisions? What tiny factors, invisible, in the jutting edges of personality and circumstance, contribute to this inevitability?
Jesse Ball
20.
This is what we bear, I thought, the nearness of other lives.
Jesse Ball
21.
Different times and different structures make more sense at one point in life than at another.
Jesse Ball
22.
The books turn out to be about things afterwards. I don't go into them with concepts, for the most part.
Jesse Ball
23.
I have a different purpose in writing each novel. Some of them seem more similar than others, but the purposes are always different.
Jesse Ball
24.
I want to say less, and it's easier to say less.
Jesse Ball
25.
A person always has a chance to protest this or that.
Jesse Ball
26.
Clarity is the most important thing to me - in thinking - and so I try in the books to be as clear as possible.
Jesse Ball
27.
Much of my work has been done in first person.
Jesse Ball
28.
I begin with an image of some sort, just as if you saw something out of a window, and then went to the window to see what it was.
Jesse Ball
29.
I am clearer in my mind and a bit less confused than I used to be.
Jesse Ball
30.
I'm clearer now in what I want to say, and I know better how to say just that.
Jesse Ball
31.
I'd say writing is easier for me now than it once was, but I do less of it.
Jesse Ball
32.
A beginning idea for a book might be: a boy emerges from a hole in the ground. He enters a house. The book will take place in the first ten minutes following his arrival.
Jesse Ball
33.
I don't start with an idea or concept in the sense that I flesh out an idea or concept and set it at the center of something.
Jesse Ball
34.
A book can just be a description of a stick being snapped in half. If the reader is brought to feel the plight of the stick, well, you can imagine what that would be like.
Jesse Ball
35.
I don't think anything needs to happen in a book.
Jesse Ball
36.
Americans are genuinely and profoundly anti-intellectual. They are especially so in their pleasure-seeking, which is epically banal.
Jesse Ball
37.
If Americans are to read something that is difficult, they will only do so supposing they will be admired for having done it.
Jesse Ball
38.
As far as ideas about book design: I have plenty. But I also try and let people do their jobs.
Jesse Ball