1.
A lot of us don't want to be quite that serious about world problems. Our life is there to enjoy, not to be an eternal dissident, eternally unhappy with how things are and with the state of mankind.
Robert Sheckley
2.
It takes me a long time to get with a landscape. It took me 20 years before I wrote anything about Ibiza, and I haven't written about Oregon yet, although I've been there 20 years - possibly I'm almost due.
Robert Sheckley
3.
Action isn’t my forte. I’m an expert on contemplation and mild regret.
Robert Sheckley
4.
I've always thought of absurdism as a French fad I'd like to belong to.
Robert Sheckley
5.
As far as the mechanics go, working with other people on received ideas was for me a very interesting technical problem. I can't say that any of my collaborations engaged my heart, but they engaged the craftsman in me.
Robert Sheckley
6.
Science fiction is very healthy in its form.
Robert Sheckley
7.
I'm quite influenced in this by one of my heroes, Montaigne, who thought a man's real task was to render as honest an account of himself as he could.
Robert Sheckley
8.
It is a truism throughout the civilized galaxy that when you go to the police, your troubles really begin.
Robert Sheckley
9.
I'm not too fond of the hard work and the constant battle with self-doubt that goes on when I write, but I figure that's part of the territory.
Robert Sheckley
10.
Ethical and questions of philosophy interest me a great deal.
Robert Sheckley
11.
I sell well now in Russia. I remember one signing in Russia some years ago where the bookstore had two strongmen to hold the crowds back.
Robert Sheckley
12.
Once you find you can't walk as far and as fast as you were able, life becomes more complicated.
Robert Sheckley
13.
I'm not so interested any more in how a great deal of science fiction goes. It goes into things like Star Wars and Star Trek which all go excellent in their own way.
Robert Sheckley
14.
I have never been a critic of science fiction as a whole.
Robert Sheckley
15.
Why in God's name should a God be praised if he is only performing his Godly function?
Robert Sheckley
16.
Wherever you go in the galaxy, you can find a food business, a house-building business, a war business, a peace business, a governing business, and so forth. And, of course, a God business, which is called 'religion,' and which is a particularly reprehensible line of endeavor.
Robert Sheckley
17.
I would like to do a novel where some curse turns that into how the world really is - a blessing or a curse, I don't know which.
Robert Sheckley
18.
Originality is a concept possible only to a limited viewpoint.
Robert Sheckley
19.
A novel is often a longer process in handling self-doubt.
Robert Sheckley
20.
The British audience was very important to me. I have always looked away from American to non-American audiences and so this was important.
Robert Sheckley
21.
But science perhaps is very difficult without faith. Also there is no simple way of saying now we have science, we don't need faith anymore.
Robert Sheckley
22.
So I wrote what I hoped would be science fiction, I was not at all sure if what I wrote would be acceptable even. But I don't say that I consciously wrote with humour. Humour is a part of you that comes out.
Robert Sheckley
23.
I don't finish every story, but I probably write and send out three out of five of them.
Robert Sheckley
24.
I think it can be quite impossible to think well of yourself, so I prefer not to think about that too much. But I am very pleased, obviously.
Robert Sheckley
25.
I was never able to write seriously about heroes because I was very aware that I was not one and that in my background there was not this heroic thing.
Robert Sheckley
26.
I like to think that I have no single view nor any single situation that I think things arrive from. I try to give examples of what I think are interesting questions for me.
Robert Sheckley
27.
I do think that short story writing is often a matter of luck.
Robert Sheckley
28.
The absurdist stuff wasn't terribly popular at the time I was doing it.
Robert Sheckley