Tom Drury Quotes
Most Famous Tom Drury Quotes of All Time!
We have created a collection of some of the best tom-drury quotes so you can read and share anytime with your friends and family. Share our Top 10 Tom Drury Quotes on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest.
My life in the town I grew up in was much quieter than 'The End of Vandalism.' Part of the reason I think I wrote it was because it was too damn quiet when I was young, and I wanted people to come out and talk. And they do. There's so much dialogue in 'The End of Vandalism.'
I really, honest to God, didn't know what to read until I was out of college and living in Boston, and someone said, 'Well, why don't you read Hemingway?' And I thought, 'OK. I guess I'll try this Hemingway fellow.'
Very few things are totally devoid of any possibility of humor. If you are aware of that possibility and alive to the scene becoming that way, then it just happens naturally. That's what I feel living is like, too. I find a lot of things that make me smile or make me laugh over the course of the day.
I don't do nonfiction anymore. Eventually, you just feel constrained by the facts. You want to go where the words take you, and people's actual lives don't always conform. And you can't know them that well.
I think, most of us, when we look back over our lives, see perhaps moments when everything was dangerous and precarious. We're making all these mistakes, and yet somehow we make it through. It's the making it through that that interests me. To go through the valley of trouble and come out the other side. That's what we all have to do.
I grew up in Swaledale, in Iowa. Its population was 220 when I was growing up, and it's probably 150 now. I lived in town and sometimes worked on the farms outside of town in the summers.
My dad read, I think, the Perry Mason mysteries and Zane Grey and some humor compendiums... And then at one point, the bookmobile started coming to town. That was really cool. I mean, that was when I read my first Raymond Carver story. I think that was probably 1969 or so. I must have been 13.
I think the book that really kind of woke me up a little bit when I was starting to write was 'Winesburg, Ohio' by Sherwood Anderson. I was in grad school at Brown, going for an M.A. in creative writing. Those stories seemed to me to be doing away with pretty writing.
Rather than writing about international events, I write about individual lives. There is elation and sadness, death and birth, love and jealousy, co-operation and betrayal. All the great emotional transactions that happen wherever people come together.
Whenever I have tried to make a character bad, they end up being good in some way.
If you become a creative writer with the idea that you are going to make a whole lot of money, then maybe this isn't the best choice for you.
I don't really think in terms of making something that is going to be bought everywhere, because I don't read those things. My writing is a process in which I try my best to make good sentences and a sequence of events that is compelling and believable.
I don't think of my characters as bumbling. I think that trouble is what drives a novel, both big troubles and small troubles, and whatever people try to do in life, there are a series of stumbling-blocks in the way, and I think that makes for interesting reading. I think of them as doing their best with the roadblocks that they're given.
I tend to write about towns because that's what I remember best. You can put a boundary on the number of characters you insert into a small town. I tend to create a lot of characters, so this is a sort of restraint on the character building I do for a novel.
The past has an undeniable grip on everyone, except, perhaps, amnesiacs.
I go back to a very specific aspect of the Midwest - small towns surrounded by farmland. They make a good stage for what I like to write about, i.e., roads and houses, bridges and rivers and weather and woods, and people to whom strange or interesting things happen, causing problems they must overcome.
I do get very involved in making a scene work without giving too much thought about how it affects the overall, which I think is hard to know in any case.
I like the writing life, but it's not something that always makes enough money.
Guys, we are trying to share Unique Tom Drury 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
Just for the record, I personally do agree with some of the sentiments of Rabbi Meir Kahane. I think he...
Quote Of The DayToday's Shayari
रिश्तों को सम्भालते सम्भालते थकान सी होने लगी है...
रोज़ कोई ना कोई नाराज हो जाता है........
Today's Joke
मास्टर जी: किसी को कुछ पूछना है क्या?
संता: सर मुझे यह पूछना था कि, ये जो पेट में भूख...
Today's Status
A real friend is one who walks in when the rest of the world walks out.
Status Of The DayToday's Prayer
Guide my heart never to believe in vanities that present themselves to me on the daily basis. Strengthen my resolutions...
Prayer Of The Day