Best 23 quotes of Louise Brown on MyQuotes

Louise Brown

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    Louise Brown

    Don't call 'em dogs. Dogs are loyal and they run after balls.

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    Louise Brown

    Don't write the book you think publishers want to commission. Plenty of other writers will be doing the same thing.

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    Louise Brown

    Every year I teach dozens of students at the University of Birmingham. Most of the students on the gender and sexuality courses are women. I guess this is because the boys don't think that gender applies to them: that it's a subject for girls.

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    Louise Brown

    I bought a selection of short, romantic fiction novels, studied them, decided that I had found a formula and then wrote a book that I figured was the perfect story. Thank goodness it was rejected.

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    Louise Brown

    I can't pick out one single book that had such a profound personal impact.

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    Louise Brown

    I could write an entertaining novel about rejection slips, but I fear it would be overly long.

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    Louise Brown

    If you can't return a favor, pass it on.

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    Louise Brown

    I have a good collection of cookery books. This is not so much because I like cooking, but because I like eating.

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    Louise Brown

    I'm working on a nonfiction book on Nepal and a novel about diasporas.

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    Louise Brown

    It took a brave editor in the U.S. to sign a contract for Dancing Girls, and without her belief in the book, I'm not sure it would ever have found its way into print.

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    Louise Brown

    I used to think about how I was conceived quite a lot when I was about 10 or 11, but I don't think about it at all now that so many other babies have been born in the same way.

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    Louise Brown

    Much of my reading time over the last decade and a half has been spent reading aloud to my children. Those children's bedtime rituals of supper, bath, stories, and sleep have been a staple of my life and some of the best, most special times I can remember.

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    Louise Brown

    Never give up. And most importantly, be true to yourself. Write from your heart, in your own voice, and about what you believe in.

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    Louise Brown

    People still come up to me and ask whether I am Louise Brown or if they've seen me somewhere else before.

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    Louise Brown

    Reading is my greatest luxury.

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    Louise Brown

    Sometimes I like to play the soundtracks to famous musicals so we can all sing along. South Pacific is one of my favorites. Our neighbors must hate us.

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    Louise Brown

    The Dancing Girls of Lahore was offered to dozens of British publishers and was turned down by everyone. It is still on offer in the U.K., but I'm not confident there will be any takers.

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    Louise Brown

    The importance and influence of books on me has been cumulative: the result of hearing and reading lots of stories about interesting people and places.

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    Louise Brown

    The richest most meaningful stories are found in small places: made, carried, crafted, told, and retold by apparently unimportant people.

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    Louise Brown

    The young women in my classes are feisty and clever and believe, often with the passion of youthful optimism, that feminism is a battle already won. I worry for them - and for my daughters, too.

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    Louise Brown

    When I was a child and teenager I read whenever I had the opportunity, but since then I've found it hard to read as much as I'd like, children, work, and pets all providing powerful incentives to escape into a book and a practical reason why I rarely do so.

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    Louise Brown

    Another of them died last night. His body was in the bazaar this morning. It lay, with a collecting bowl at its feet, on the charpoy that is reserved for those who die without money or family to bury them. He looked desiccated and his skin had the sheen and color of the dates we eat to break our fast. There are new bodies on that charpoy every week.

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    Louise Brown

    a raped girl is bad for the family: it shows that they can’t protect their women; that they have little social standing; and that they’re not respectable. It’s worse for the victim because once a woman, or a girl—or a boy—is known as the target of a rape she becomes so despised, so shamed, so worthless that she turns into public property. No one is raped only once.