Ruth Prawer Jhabvala Quotes
Most Famous Ruth Prawer Jhabvala Quotes of All Time!
We have created a collection of some of the best ruth-prawer-jhabvala quotes so you can read and share anytime with your friends and family. Share our Top 10 Ruth Prawer Jhabvala Quotes on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest.
The older books were quite light-hearted. But I think most of my novels do end on a deep note of pessimism. Shadows seem to be closing in. The final conclusion isn't that life is wonderful and everything is bright and cheery and in the garden.
India was a sensation. It was remarkable to see all those parrots flying about, the brilliant foliage and the brilliant sky. It was a tremendous pageant. I never noticed the poverty.
I was never interested in film. Never. I never even thought of it. I wasn't even a film buff, I didn't see many films ever.
Film, for me, is in two stages. One is when I write the script more or less on my own - that's the nice bit. And then comes for me the unpleasant bit when they all go off, 100 people - actors and camera people and film and sound - and I stay away. When they go into the editing room, I come in again, and that's the bit I like.
Film is not like a book; it's not a writer's baby at all. So many people have put in their talent, by that time that you feel grateful for what they've done, you don't feel possessive about it in any way.
First, I was so dazzled and besotted by India. People said the poverty was biblical, and I'm afraid that was my attitude, too. It's terribly easy to get used to someone else's poverty if you're living a middle-class life in it. But after a while, I saw it wasn't possible to accept it, and I also didn't want to.
One doesn't choose to become a writer. One is just born that way.
I never really had any close friends in India, and I felt a terrible loneliness and isolation for many years. Westernized Indians don't like my books and I tend not to like westernized Indians - so we're quits.
The misfortune to be born when I was, where I was. That was a piece of bad luck.
England opened up the world of literature for me. Not really having a world of my own, I made up for my disinheritance by absorbing the world of others... I loved them: George Eliot, Thomas Hardy, Charles Dickens... I adopted them passionately.
Once a refugee, always a refugee. I can't ever remember not being all right wherever I was, but you don't give your whole allegiance to a place or want to be entirely identified with the society you're living in.
I stand before you as a writer without any ground of being out of which to write: really blown about from country to country, culture to culture till I feel - till I am - nothing. As it happens, I like it that way.
I am a central European with an English education and a deplorable tendency to constant self-analysis. I am irritable and have weak nerves.
Perhaps I'm just fickle by nature and get tired of countries the way other women do of husbands or lovers.
I'm not interested in who am I. I'm interested in what's gone, the disinheritance, what I've been able to become or learn or fuse with or not fuse with. A certain freedom comes... I like it that way.
England gave me a language and literature, the basis of what I am as a writer, but when I started writing more directly about my own experience, it wasn't England so much as what went before.
I only really woke up in India. It was my first experience of plenty, strangely enough, because everything in England was rationed. I loved sweets, but you couldn't get them; then there was this marvelous mitthai - I went crazy.
All my early books are written as if I were Indian. In England, I had started writing as if I were English; now I write as if I were American. You take other people's backgrounds and characters; Keats called it negative capability.
I like characters who are larger-than-life, whether life-loving women or the artist or guru who grabs everything. But I don't live among people like that.
Guys, we are trying to share Unique Ruth Prawer Jhabvala Quotes, so you will not get to read the same things again and again on our website. You can also share your favorites on Facebook or send them to a friend who loves to reading quotes.
Today's Quote
I've always loved music and held it as a sacred thing that I can't touch, as I don't really want...
Quote Of The DayToday's Shayari
फुर्सत मिले तो दोस्तो का हाल भी पूछलिया करो दोस्तों … जिसके सीने मे दिल की जगह तुम लोग धड़कते...
Shayari Of The DayToday's Joke
बीवी ने नई सिम खरीदी और सोचा कि पति
को सरप्राइज दूंगी। वह किचन में गई और पति को फोन...
Today's Status
Every sunrise marks the rise of life over death, hope over despair and happiness over suffering. Wishing you a very...
Status Of The DayToday's Prayer
To my dear family, I pray that you shall flourish and be prosperous in all your ways in the name...
Prayer Of The Day