Top 16 Adult Fiction Literary Fiction Quotes
#1. She'd discovered the beginnings of her adult person, her preference for lucidity, prudence, responsibility, and restraint. Tranquility could be eked from boredom, results from hard work.
V.S. Kemanis
#2. I guess if you get too close, the twinkling stops; they don't look like stars anymore.
Graham Spaid
#3. I love playing confused, broken characters.
Nina Dobrev
#4. Were the stars against him? A woman's fingers are quicker in the sky and shine more brightly.
Graham Spaid
#5. Despise pleasure; pleasure bought by pain in injurious.
Horace
#7. A lot of young-adult authors, great ones, have tried their hands at literary fiction, and not a lot of them have succeeded. Not even Roald Dahl could switch-hit, and not for lack of trying.
Lev Grossman
#8. The best part is seeing my kids grow and become individuals, and the fact that they're happy and well-adjusted.
Martina Mcbride
#9. Sometimes the song title comes with the songs, other times you just sorta make something up afterwards.
Wayne Coyne
#10. Important safety tip with most of the spiritual world: if you ignore it, it has less power. This does not work with demons or other demi-beings. Other exceptions to the rule are vampires, zombies, ghouls, lycanthropes, witches ... Oh, hell, ignoring only works for ghosts.
Laurell K. Hamilton
#11. There are ultimate truths you cannot hide from no matter how high you climb or how long you sit alone. Everything is on its way somewhere, even if that place feels like nowhere.
LeighLa Graham
#13. Question: You're 21-years-old, a young adult writing mature adult literary fiction. Imaj: Yes, I feel creativity is an ageless thing.
Imaj
#14. The cradle-to-grave welfare society enfeebles the citizenry to such a degree you can never generate enough money.
Mark Steyn
#15. I wouldn't dignify it with the name immoral.
Graham Spaid
#16. ... the primary trait of young adult literature is that the author's emphasis is on plot and character and not on his own brilliance. And because few people talk about whether a young adult work is commercial or literary; the two are still in sync, and everyone's benefitting.
Eliot Schrefer
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