Best 20 quotes of Michael Dirda on MyQuotes

Michael Dirda

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    Best selling authors are always worth listening to, even if you choose to ignore their advice.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    I am shocked that we seemed to have learned nothing, absolutely nothing, from Vietnam.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    I have now and again tried to imagine the perfect environment, the ideal conditions for reading: A worn leather armchair on a rainy night? A hammock in a freshly mown backyard? A verandah overlooking the summer sea? Good choices, every one. But I have no doubt that they are all merely displacements, sentimental attempts to replicate the warmth and snugness of my mother's lap.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    In Madame Bovary Flaubert never allows anything to go on too long; he can suggest years of boredom in a paragraph, capture the essence of a character in a single conversational exchange, or show us the gulf between his soulful heroine and her dull-witted husband in a sentence (and one that, moreover, presages all Emma's later experience of men). (...) This is one of the summits of prose art, and not to know such a masterpiece is to live a diminished life.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    In PLATO AT THE GOOGLEPLEX, Rebecca Newberger Goldstein set out to showcase, in sometimes startling ways, the continuing relevance of a classic philosopher. But what's remarkable is that she actually brings off this tour de force with both madcap brilliance and commanding authority.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    I sometimes lie awake at night and try to imagine what would be the best period in history to spend one's seventy-odd years.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    I think that his [Kurt Vonnegut's] appeal, though, will always be chiefly to adolescents. His sense of the world matches that of young people, who feel deeply life's absurdity.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    I think the essence of [Kurt] Vonnegut's humanism lay in his emphasis on human kindness as, so to speak, our saving grace.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    [Kurt] Vonnegut was a writer whose great gift was that he always seemed to be talking directly to you. He wasn't writing, he wasn't showing off, he was just telling you, nobody else, what it was like, what it was all about. That intimacy made him beloved. We can admire the art of John Updike or Philip Roth, but we love Vonnegut.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    Make sure your message is clear, yet that you are faithful to its complexity.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    Many readers simply can't stomach fantasy. They immediately picture elves with broadswords or mighty-thewed barbarians with battle axes, seeking the bejeweled Coronet of Obeisance ... (But) the best fantasies pull aside the velvet curtain of mere appearance. ... In most instances, fantasy ultimately returns us to our own now re-enchanted world, reminding us that it is neither prosaic nor meaningless, and that how we live and what we do truly matters.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    Nearly all the writing of our time is likely to disappear in a hundred years. Certainly most readers - and nearly all critics - feel that [Kurt] Vonnegut started to repeat himself, to grow increasingly self-indulgent and meandering, and to sometimes just blather in his later work. But his books up to "Slaughterhouse-Five" do possess a distinctiveness that will insure some kind of permanence, if only in the history of the 1960s and of science fiction.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    Once we know the plot and its surprises, we can appreciate a book's artistry without the usual confusion and sap flow of emotion, content to follow the action with tenderness and interest, all passion spent.  Rather than surrender to the story or the characters - as a good first reader ought - we can now look at how the book works, and instead of swooning over it like a besotted lover begin to appreciate its intricacy and craftmanship.  Surprisingly, such dissection doesn't murder the experience.  Just the opposite: Only then does a work of art fully live.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    Order and surprise: these are two intertwined elements that make for any great library or collection.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    Science fiction is, after all, the art of extrapolation.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    The world is a library of strange and wonderful books, and sometimes we just need to go prowling through the stacks.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    This Is Not a Novel memorializes the treasures and detritus of one man's singularly cultured mind. (...) If you don't know Writer's work at all, try This Is Not a Novel. There may be some doubt about exactly what kind of book it is, but not that it's altogether wonderful.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    What matters are those ordinary acts of kindness and of love, not vaulting ambition with its attendant hubris and smugness.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    Нe [Kurt Vonnegut] felt that life was largely a crap shoot and that we simply need to muddle on as best we can, being as kind and loving to one another as possible, right now. It's a pretty good philosophy, no matter what one's religious beliefs or lack of them.

  • By Anonym
    Michael Dirda

    Fiction is a house with many stately mansions, but also one in which it is wise, at least sometimes, to swing from the chandeliers.