Quotes on the topic: Bloom


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It's a sort of bloom on a woman. If you have it, you don't need to have anything else; and if you don't have it, it doesn't much matter what else you have.


John Updike is always fun. And one of my former students, Tom Pynchon. And Harold Bloom, another former student.


The sports world is an echo chamber. All it takes is one quote from a general manager and a thousand sports columns bloom.


In a perfect world, I would be 6-foot-3 and have a perfect head of hair and look like Orlando Bloom.


Let a hundred flowers bloom.


Let a hundred flowers bloom, let a hundred schools of thought contend.


I'm not going to be the next Colin Farrell or Orlando Bloom.


I like the immediacy of blogs and the democratizing effects of letting millions of voices bloom on the Web.


I think the most satisfying part about filmmaking is seeing a production in full bloom. When I write, I write in isolation.


Writers may be disreputable, incorrigible, early to decay or late to bloom but they dare to go it alone.


The Right likes to think that intellectuals and academics like Allan Bloom and Dinesh D'Souza spurred the explosive growth of movement conservatism in the 1980s and 1990s, when it was actually mostly Rush Limbaugh.


A poet must be a psychologist, but a secret one: he should know and feel the roots of phenomena but present only the phenomena themselves in full bloom or as they fade away.


We do not rejoice in victories. We rejoice when a new kind of cotton is grown and when strawberries bloom in Israel.


Writing, yeah. Me and my friend Scott Bloom just finished the first rough draft of a script. It's taken us three years to do, but we finally got a first draft. And we'll see whatever happens with that.


I met Elijah Wood once, I met Peter Jackson, I met Orlando Bloom, and they're all really cool.


Bloom County was set in a tidy, rural environment probably because of Harper Lee's 'To Kill a Mockingbird.'


The people want to go back to the time when democracy was in full bloom.


In 'Dublinesque', Spanish writer Enrique Vila-Matas inverts the terms of Joyce's 'Ulysses' and tells the story of a man who, after living a hyperkinetic life like those of Odysseus and Leopold Bloom, resolves to never leave his room again and to reduce his mental activity to a minimum.


Saying the Tech Bloom is not commercially driven is like saying Mother Teresa had an interest in the poor.


Whether or not you agree with Ayn Rand - and I have certain issues with some of her beliefs - the woman can tell a story. I mean, the novel as an art form is just in full florid bloom in 'Atlas Shrugged.' It's an unbelievable story. The characters are so compelling, and what she's saying is mind-expanding.