Top 39 Jennifer Haigh Quotes
#1. Maturity begins when we're content to feel we're right about something without feeling the necessity to prove someone else wrong.
Sydney J. Harris
#2. I follow a set of principles, I follow the Constitution. And that's what I base my votes on. Limited government, economic freedom and individual liberty.
Justin Amash
#4. 'Baker Towers' is the book I've always known I would write, but it wasn't an easy book to do.
Jennifer Haigh
#5. Destiny, she'd learned, was written in the heavens; a person couldn't take what the universe didn't wish to give.
Jennifer Haigh
#6. The door of illumination is open to those for whom other doors are closed.
Idries Shah
#7. I spent some time, six months or so, ruminating about the characters before I sat down to write 'Faith'.
Jennifer Haigh
#8. Sooner or later you have to decide what you believe. It was a thing I'd always known but until recently had forgotten: that faith is a decision. In its most basic form, it is a choice.
Jennifer Haigh
#9. No power over the freedom of religion [is] delegated to the United States by the Constitution.
James Madison
#10. It was a lesson most people learned much earlier; that even friendship could have an undisclosed shelf life. That loyalty and affection, so consuming and powerful, could dissipate like fog.
Jennifer Haigh
#11. Working in a prison, is, to my mind, similar in ways to working in a coal mine. It's going to scare away a lot of people.
Jennifer Haigh
#12. I was raised in a Catholic family, spent twelve years in parochial schools, and had extremely fond memories of my interactions with Catholic clergy.
Jennifer Haigh
#13. The wind and the waves will toss you about, but it'll all be worth it.
Marty Rubin
#14. But his singing was unconscious and irrepressible - an expression of his native exuberance, the dreamy, buoyant soundtrack running through his head.
Jennifer Haigh
#15. William Faulkner, Muriel Spark, Richard Yates, William Styron, James Salter, Alice Munro. They're very different writers, and I admire them for different reasons. The common thread, I guess, is that they remind me what's possible, why I wanted to write fiction in the first place.
Jennifer Haigh
#16. The story of my family ... changes with the teller.
Jennifer Haigh
#17. I have great respect for writers who are humble, whose language allows the reader to see the story but doesn't get in the way. Language is a window, and if the window is clean, you shouldn't be aware you're looking through glass.
Jennifer Haigh
#18. More than anything in life, she wishes she'd let him. That she'd smiled for the camera. That she'd said yes. Life was gone before you knew it;how foolish she'd been to refuse any of it.
Jennifer Haigh
#19. I've always felt that writing can be learned but not really taught. The best thing somebody can do for you is to put the right book in your hands at the right time. I grew up in a family where the right book was always being put in my hands.
Jennifer Haigh
#20. As a young writer, I learned a lot about grammatical structure from reading plays, from performing the plays. I think that was a wonderful apprenticeship.
Jennifer Haigh
#21. I believed, after writing 'Mrs. Kimble,' that I knew how to write a novel. I quickly discovered that I only knew how to write that novel. 'Baker Towers' was a different beast entirely; and I felt as though I had to learn to write all over again.
Jennifer Haigh
#22. Writing fiction, like reading fiction, is a practice in empathy.
Jennifer Haigh
#23. That renunciation of human closeness, of our deepest instincts: is it, in the end, simply too much to ask? Good men-sound, healthy men-can't make the sacrifice, or don't want to; has Holy Mother settled for the unsound and unhealthy? Has the Church, ever pragmatic, made do with what is left?
Jennifer Haigh
#24. I wanted only a familiar voice, someone who knew me. Not some earlier, larval version of myself ...
Jennifer Haigh
#25. Like all writers, I draw from life as I know it; but it's a refracted kind of reality, and none of it is factually true.
Jennifer Haigh
#26. I'm mangled," I said. "On the inside and the outside.
Tarryn Fisher
#27. Dancing is just discovery, discovery, discovery
Martha Graham
#28. Do you know that it can be a sin to give birth? I'd never heard those words before. Katya
Svetlana Alexievich
#30. When they touched it was like touching her own body. From childhood they had been the same height; their arms and legs and hands were still perfectly congruent. Only the centers of them were different, aching, fascinated, every part of them heated to the same temperature as the sun warmed pond.
Jennifer Haigh
#31. Jesus. It was worth it," Caden said, looking dazed and pleased.
Laura Thalassa
#33. God remains the same - faithful, loving and powerful - through changes big and small.
Janet P. Eckles
#34. Watching, I dread my own womanhood, the day when I too will follow along carrying bags of groceries, my mission wherever I go to feed other people who take actual part in life while I am simply the catering staff.
Jennifer Haigh
#35. Growing up, I didn't know anybody who didn't have a miner in the family. Both of my grandfathers were miners.
Jennifer Haigh
#36. Another factor is the post-9/11 security mentality, which views sunlight as toxic and imagines that somehow bin Laden is dependent upon our government documents, a "fact" that has never, ever been supported to my knowledge. So, that's the second factor.
Ted Gup
#37. We should be too big to take offense and too noble to give it.
Abraham Lincoln
#38. I have written my whole life. I remember writing as a small child.
Jennifer Haigh
#39. The idea of an election is much more interesting to me than the election itself ... The act of voting is in itself the defining moment.
Jeff Melvoin