Best 52 quotes of Dana Spiotta on MyQuotes

Dana Spiotta

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    Dana Spiotta

    A good novel should be deeply unsettling - its satisfactions should come from its authenticity and its formal coherence. We must feel something crucial is at stake.

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    Dana Spiotta

    All roads lead to Wall Street, but we feel the effects of Wall Street on every street corner. Certainly in Syracuse, N.Y., where I live.

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    Dana Spiotta

    Although a great restaurant experience must include great food, a bad restaurant experience can be achieved through bad service alone. Ideally, service is invisible. You notice it only when something goes wrong.

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    Dana Spiotta

    Each character requires different language, and these issues become inseparable. You have all these balls in the air: language, character, narrative. For me, the primary focus must be words, sentences, paragraphs.

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    Dana Spiotta

    Even a documentary portrait of a person that tries to be very accurate is shaped by the filmmaker in so many ways.

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    Dana Spiotta

    Even if we try to see people in our lives accurately, it is distorted by our own wants and prejudices and experiences.

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    Dana Spiotta

    For me writing is an organic process that starts with engaging the language and then thinking about the structure of the novel as you move along. Especially in revision you start to notice correlations. Things come up, not self-consciously, because you're busy feeling your way through sentences and trying to push the language into new places.

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    Dana Spiotta

    Getting an audience requires luck as well as talent. Some artists are private and shy. It costs them too much.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I always think the novelist should go to the culture's dark places and poke around. Pose a lot of hard questions.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I am a great procrastinator. When the writing is going really well, the laundry piles up.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I am always trying to do something new and different. The first step is curiosity, questions. You pay attention to what fascinates you. If you can't shake it, there is something there.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I am, it seems, interested in people with multiple identities. I think we all have multiple identities.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I am one Dana when I am talking to my daughter, another when I am talking to the IRS, and another still when I do an interview. These characters are just extreme versions of ordinary human self-switching.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I don't feel sentimental about the past, but I can't help noticing how hard it has become to keep a grip on anything. Maybe it's the totalizing impact of corporate culture, maybe it's the atomizing impact of technology.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I don't have a lot of skills, but one thing I can do is, I can compartmentalize. I can make that a little world that I can go back to, so I can be a waitress, or I can be a teacher, and then go and work on my book.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I do want to write about social/cultural/historical context. I'm interested in relationships, in character, but within a specific social context. Which is kind of a political thing, I admit that. But it's what I'm interested in, and it's how I believe human behavior is legible.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I find poignancy in the moments when a person realizes that she has made mistakes. I am not as interested in the mistakes themselves as I am with the consequences and how the person responds to her realization.

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    Dana Spiotta

    If you directly try to write about an idea, it will never be what you imagined. But if you're imagining through the building of sentences, through the characters, and paying attention to avoid ease and comfort yet still thinking about making the sentences work, you will get a shot at some real interesting stuff.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I have to say that movies have as much impact on me as music. And that I learned as much about narrative from movies as I did from reading novels, how to arrange stories, how to juxtapose things.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I like the challenge of creating a world with only sentences.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I like to buy books for the kids in my family. I guess that's why they call me the 'mean' aunt.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I like to mix the real and the imaginary. Sometimes it is characters inspired by real people I know or know of. Sometimes it is a named person from the common cultural dreamscape. And it is tricky, because they have a lot of associated ideas that come with them, and a lot of actual facts.

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    Dana Spiotta

    In order to be a living, breathing thing, a novel has to be failed in some kind of way. Or at least that's how I keep writing them.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I take the outline from a real person as inspiration, but the in-line is totally made up. Which is why I usually invent imaginary names.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I think it's harder than ever to be an artist. I think that you end up, especially as a middle-aged person, you pay such big consequences for saying, 'I'm just going to devote my life to making art,' or 'I'm going to devote my life to writing novels.' You end up with no resources.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I think most writers have to have a practice of writing. For me it is very early in the morning. I try to make it a separate world from the rest of my life.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I think there's a false division people sometimes make in describing literary novels, where there are people who write systems novels, or novels of ideas, and there are people who write about emotional things in which the movement is character driven. But no good novels are divisible in that way.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I think there's a lot to be learned from pop culture. But at the same time I see the dangers of using it in an exclusive way to construct meaning in your life.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I try to write about how we live today, how we use language, technology, our bodies.

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    Dana Spiotta

    It takes a long time to write a novel when you have to keep interrupting your work to earn money.

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    Dana Spiotta

    I want what I write to be deeply engaging and strange and true.

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    Dana Spiotta

    Most human things are full of conflict and ambivalence, not ease and simplicity. The world has grown increasingly fundamentalist, and the parameters of discussion have become narrowed. People, when they're fearful, are vulnerable to certainty in rhetoric.

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    Dana Spiotta

    My husband is a musician. He cooks and he's a chef but he also, he makes basement recordings. So many people in my life make basement recordings, so I feel very lucky, I'm surrounded by very creative people.

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    Dana Spiotta

    My teaching exists in a different part of my brain. However, I am lucky enough to teach very smart graduate students.

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    Dana Spiotta

    Occupy Wall Street means making Wall Street and the corporate power elite understand that the people affected by the binge of unregulated greed are not going away, and they are not going to give up.

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    Dana Spiotta

    People think it's suspect and self-indulgent to make art, and I don't think that's true. Some people think you should be busy making something that you can sell in the marketplace, and if nobody wants to buy it, it must be crap. And that's not true.

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    Dana Spiotta

    Tell me it's forbidden, unthinkable, and that's where I want to go. Because the chances are it's complicated, and the complications are meaningful.

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    Dana Spiotta

    That was one of the reasons I became a writer - I never really had that many friends. I would read a lot, and listen to music. And that was my life.

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    Dana Spiotta

    The idea that you can live off the grid and just do your own thing is a very American idea - that you should be able to do your own thing, if you want to, if you're willing to pay the price for it. I think the price has gotten higher and higher.

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    Dana Spiotta

    The issue isn't, Am I good enough? No. The issue is, Do I not have any other choice? Will and desire don't matter. Ability doesn't matter. Need is the only thing that matters.

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    Dana Spiotta

    The novel is about, for me, sustained and organized looking. I do think that people have a hunger for a sustained engagement, that concentration that the book can offer.

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    Dana Spiotta

    There are lots of authentic, moving characters in so-called systems novels, just as there are certainly deep structural ideas in some character-driven novels.

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    Dana Spiotta

    There's lots of things that can't make it in the world that are worth making. There are lots of great artists who never make it, there are lots of great writers who don't get published - is it still worthwhile? Aren't we glad people are still doing it?

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    Dana Spiotta

    The writer has to be brave, I think.

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    Dana Spiotta

    Usually there is a paradox in what a character wants. A conflict is built deeply within them. And then you put them in motion, throw everything at them until they reveal themselves further.

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    Dana Spiotta

    We exist because of suburbia. Suburbia is a freak’s dreamworld, a world of extra rooms upstairs and long, lazy afternoons with no interference. A place where you can listen to your LPs for hours on end. You can live in your room, your own rent-free corner of the universe, and create a world of pleasure and interest entirely centered on yourself and your interior aesthetic and logic.

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    Dana Spiotta

    Yes, I did try acting when I was in high school and I was terrible at it. So I definitely have had the experience of being bad at artistic endeavor.

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    Dana Spiotta

    You are always working towards the moments in which characters experience reckonings or insight or change. I like to track them past those moments.

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    Dana Spiotta

    You're trying to make the language work, and your subconscious is being allowed to make the deeper, more profound connections. It's much better than going at it all frontally. But you can't conjure it in an intellectual way; it has to come out of another engagement, a more intuitive engagement. Revision is where the intellectual, analytical work happens. At least for me.

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    Dana Spiotta

    Your memories from your early childhood seem to have such purchase on your emotions. They are so concrete.