Anna Quindlen Quotes About Literature

We have collected for you the TOP of Anna Quindlen's best quotes about Literature! Here are collected all the quotes about Literature starting from the birthday of the Author – July 8, 1952! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 20 sayings of Anna Quindlen about Literature. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • Look back, to slavery, to suffrage, to integration and one thing is clear. Fashions in bigotry come and go. The right thing lasts.

  • The victim mentality may be the last uncomplicated thing about life in America.

  • If you want something, it will elude you. If you do not want something, you will get ten of it in the mail.

    Anna Quindlen (2010). “Living Out Loud”, p.260, Ballantine Books
  • Even as we enumerate their shortcomings, the rigor of raising children ourselves makes clear to us our mothers' incredible strength. We fear both. If they are not strong, who will protect us? If they are not imperfect, how can we equal them?

    Anna Quindlen (2010). “Living Out Loud”, p.101, Ballantine Books
  • I would be the most content if my children grew up to be the kind of people who think decorating consists mostly of building enough bookshelves.

    Anna Quindlen (2010). “Thinking Out Loud: On the Personal, the Political, the Public and the Private”, p.119, Ballantine Books
  • Women who marry early are often overly enamored of the kind of man who looks great in wedding pictures and passes the maid of honor his telephone number.

    Anna Quindlen (2010). “Living Out Loud”, p.71, Ballantine Books
  • The problem... is emblematic of what hasn't changed during the equal opportunity revolution of the last 20 years. Doors opened; opportunities evolved. Law, institutions, corporations moved forward. But many minds did not.

  • There is little premium in poetry in a world that thinks of Pound and Whitman as a weight and a sampler, not an Ezra, a Walt, a thing of beauty, a joy forever.

    Anna Quindlen (2004). “Loud and Clear”, p.173, Random House
  • Books are the plane, and the train, and the road. They are the destination, and the journey. They are home.

    Anna Quindlen (2010). “How Reading Changed My Life”, p.70, Ballantine Books
  • The greatest public health threat for many American women is the men they live with.

  • Ideas are only lethal if you suppress and don't discuss them. Ignorance is not bliss, it's stupid. Banning books shows you don't trust your kids to think and you don't trust yourself to be able to talk to them.

  • Ideas are like pizza dough, made to be tossed around.

  • The future is built on brains, not prom court, as most people can tell you after attending their high school reunion. But you'd never know it by talking to kids or listening to the messages they get from the culture and even from their schools.

  • If I get the forty additional years statisticians say are likely coming to me, I could fit in at least one, maybe two new lifetimes. Sad that only one of those lifetimes can include being the mother of young children.

    Anna Quindlen (2010). “Living Out Loud”, p.60, Ballantine Books
  • But it's important, while we are supporting lessons in respecting others, to remember that many of our youngest kids need to learn to respect themselves. You learn your worth from the way you are treated.

  • I will never understand people who think that the way to show their righteous opposition to sexual freedom is to write letters full of filthy words.

    Anna Quindlen (2010). “Thinking Out Loud: On the Personal, the Political, the Public and the Private”, p.4, Ballantine Books
  • I once wanted to be a personage. Now I am comfortable being a person.

    Anna Quindlen (2010). “Living Out Loud”, p.59, Ballantine Books
  • Life is not so much about beginnings and endings as it is about going on and on and on. It is about muddling through the middle.

    Anna Quindlen (2010). “Living Out Loud”, p.20, Ballantine Books
  • Somewhere between a third and a quarter of all people living in America today were born between 1946 and 1965 and if you think you're tired of hearing about us, you should try being one of us.

    Anna Quindlen (2010). “Thinking Out Loud: On the Personal, the Political, the Public and the Private”, p.103, Ballantine Books
  • There is only room in the lifeboat of your life for one, and you always choose yourself, and turn your parents into whatever it takes to keep you afloat.

    Anna Quindlen (2003). “Object Lessons: One True Thing; Black and Blue”
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