Quotes from Susan Minot


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Writing an adaptation is not so much a collaboration as it is a series of steps. You're basically creating a blueprint for something else.


Our concerns aren't always appropriate or morally elevated.


Preserving that privacy between a writer and the work is important. You have to shut out all those voices that have reacted to your work.


Recklessness is par for the course when you're 25.


So many bad things happen in this world because people don't know how to express things.


Success did change me. You don't want it to, but it does.


The idea that there is a family somewhere who functions is an odd concept.


The teenager's room is her cave. It is here she can meet herself, undistracted by the new hassles life is making for her. Here, she can reflect.


When I look through my sketchbooks, they bring back moments that I would otherwise have completely forgotten.


Most fiction comes from your experience.


Writing chases after the senses, and conveys them in an altered form. When it is done well, the senses come alive in a new and captured form.


David Gulden captures animals in all their wonder and intrigue, without glorifying or romanticizing them. He knows Kenya's wildlife intimately, and it shows in the depth of his images. He has an artist's eye, which delivers beauty and transport in every picture.


I love 'Anna Karenina.' It's in the top five books on my list. Tolstoy is unsurpassed in combining the grand with the trivial, that is, the small details which make up life.


I remember when I was in graduate school and someone in workshop would say, 'I'm going to bring in a chapter of my novel.' The thought that someone could think they'd write a whole long thing... I could only see twelve pages ahead. But then I realized that if you could see twelve more after that, you can start.


I went to graduate school with zero expectation. I kind of backed into it. I wanted to go back to school because I felt gaps in my literary background. I studied mostly twentieth-century English literature in college, so I thought, 'Maybe I'll go back for my writing.'


Longing, for everyone, is always there, isn't it? More intense at some times than others. You get closer to less longing - an odd metaphoric phrasing, I realize - then, you are further and longing more than ever again.


When I was in my teens and twenties, I could see friends expressing how radical they were, and I envied them, the way they lived, the way they dressed. Maybe there is a part of me that is reserved, even in rebellion.


When I was younger, I suppose I was interested in checking out as much about writing as I could: bad, weird, irritating, even things not-to-my-taste. Now I am less open. I will decide after a few pages if I want to stay in the world of the book, and if I don't, I put it down. I have less time left.


A lot of readers want characters to behave in a responsible way, or they want to understand the characters' dilemma and act, in a way, on their behalf.


Desire suppressed finds its way into other more surreal settings, into dreams.