1.
What you're trying to do when you write is to crowd the reader out of his own space and occupy it with yours, in a good cause. You're trying to take over his sensibility and deliver an experience that moves from mere information.
Robert Stone
2.
That's the great thing about literature -- it makes the world less lonely.
Robert Stone
3.
When rewriting, move quickly. It's a little like cutting your own hair.
Robert Stone
4.
The reason I was able to give up smoking was because of the computer. You couldn't lean a cigarette on a computer, like you could on a typewriter. So it just made it that much more difficult to smoke. So I quit.
Robert Stone
5.
Life is a means of extracting fiction.
Robert Stone
6.
Everybody's after a new morning. What do we have to run up and salute tomorrow?
Robert Stone
7.
I write a very rough first draft of every chapter, then I rewrite every chapter. I try to get it down in the first rewrite, but some chapters I can't get quite right the third time. There are some I go over and over and over again.
Robert Stone
8.
You don't want to depend on an editor. If you want to regret something for the rest of your life, you want to make sure you're responsible for it.
Robert Stone
9.
I've always remembered. This fellow said to me - if you think someones'doing you wrong, it's not for you to judge. Kill them first and then God can do the judging.
Robert Stone
10.
It's all about letting the story take over.
Robert Stone
11.
If you couldn't tell the difference between what hurt and what didn't, you had no business being alive. You can't have any good times if you can't tell.
Robert Stone
12.
I really, really wanted to write. I loved language. I loved literature. I loved reading. I never read a foreign language, I'm afraid, but I loved Flaubert. I loved the 19th-century classics. I love Thomas Hardy. I wanted to be a goof on a bus, but I wanted to write more.
Robert Stone
13.
The term [Americanization] invokes the transformation of the landscape into unnatural mechanical shapes, of night into day, of speed for its own sake, an irrational passion for novelty at the expense of quality, a worship of gimmickry.
Robert Stone
14.
The desires of the heart...are as crooked as a corkscrew.
Robert Stone
15.
If you haven't fought for your life for something you want, you don't know what's life all about.
Robert Stone
16.
One does not consider style, because style is.
Robert Stone
17.
I think everybody must be aware that this society is a whole lot shakier now than it was before the war. I was trying to examine, in 'Dog Soldiers,' the process of that blow falling on America
Robert Stone
18.
I start early in the morning. I'm usually out in the woods with the dog as soon as it gets light; then I drink a whole lot of tea and start as early as I can, and I go as long as I can.
Robert Stone
19.
I was a radioman when I first went into the Navy, so I learned to type by taking Morse code. So I was using the typewriter from day one. My handwriting wasn't any good anyway.
Robert Stone
20.
The lessons I learned that were most important were the ones that hurt my feelings.
Robert Stone
21.
The things that you know more about than you want to know are very useful.
Robert Stone
22.
I try very hard to be fair, and I look for ironies. In a way, I live on ironies as a novelist.
Robert Stone
23.
You should let dialogue get as nearly out of control as you can. Characters should say what they say to each other instead of what they mean to say. The worst purpose of dialogue is to elicit information: "You know why we're out on this space station, Carruthers - to save the universe!"
Robert Stone
24.
There’s only one subject for fiction or poetry or even a joke: how it is. In all the arts, the payoff is always the same: recognition. If it works, you say that’s real, that’s truth, that’s life, that’s the way things are. ‘There it is.’
Robert Stone
25.
The process of creating is related to the process of dreaming although when you are writing you're doing it and when you're dreaming, it's doing you.
Robert Stone
26.
What is worst about America was acted out. What is best in America doesn't export.
Robert Stone
27.
I was under the influence of the early modern masters, Fitzgerald and Steinbeck and Hemingway, especially, when I was a kid. I reacted against writers like Barth and John Hawkes. I did not care for the post-modernist stuff; my allegiance was to realism.
Robert Stone
28.
It's easy to create a country, all you have to do is to think of a name for it
Robert Stone
29.
It’s hard to stay away from religion when you mess with acid.
Robert Stone
30.
At the time, acid made me consider questions of reality, the difference, as someone said, between words and silence. It also brought back a lot of latent religious feelings in me that I had turned my back on.
Robert Stone
31.
I think there's a necessity for some attachment to the spiritual world and, in a way, people really have to have it.
Robert Stone