Daniel Handler Quotes About Reading

We have collected for you the TOP of Daniel Handler's best quotes about Reading! Here are collected all the quotes about Reading starting from the birthday of the Author – February 28, 1970! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 23 sayings of Daniel Handler about Reading. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • I go to bed early and rise late and feel as if I have hardly slept, probably because I have been reading almost the entire time.

  • A good library will never be too neat, or too dusty, because somebody will always be in it, taking books off the shelves and staying up late reading them.

  • There are some who say that sitting at home reading is the equivalent of travel, because the experiences described in the book are more or less the same as the experiences one might have on a voyages, and there are those who say that there is no substitute for venturing out into the world. My own opinion is that it is best to travel extensively but to read the entire time, hardly glancing up to look out of the window of the airplane, train, or hired camel.

  • If you are interested in happy endings, you would be better off reading some other book. In this book, not only is there no happy ending, there is no happy beginning and very few happy things in the middle. This is because not very many happy things happened in the lives of the three Baudelaire youngsters.

  • What you don't read is often as important as what you do read.

    "The Vile Village". Book by Daniel Handler, 2001.
  • When you start reading nonfiction books about piracy, you realize that it's actually just a history of desperate people.

    "Lemony Snicket Walks the Plank". Interview with Maddie Oatman, www.motherjones.com. January, 2015.
  • Wicked people never have time for reading. It's one of the reasons for their wickedness.

  • I find reading screenplays difficult, as they're only a roadmap for what a movie might end up being.

    Interview with Tasha Robinson, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2005.
  • Grinning is something you do when you are entertained in some way, such as reading a good book or watching someone you don't care for spill orange soda all over themselves.

  • Reading is one form of escape. Running for your life is another.

  • If you enjoy books with happy endings than you are better off reading some other book.

    "The Bad Beginning". Book by Lemony Snicket, 1999.
  • Every time you enter a library you might say to yourself, "The world is quiet here," as a sort of pledge proclaiming reading to be the greater good.

    Library  
  • It is often said that reading is a gift, but to my mind that is an insufficient description, for the size of the gift of reading is so vast that it is difficult to see what is outside its wrapping.

  • The book was long, and difficult to read, and Klaus became more and more tired as the night wore on. Occasionally his eyes would close. He found himself reading the same sentence over and over. He found himself reading the same sentence over and over. He found himself reading the same sentence over and over.

    "The Bad Beginning". Book by Daniel Handler, September 30, 1999.
  • There are few sights sadder than a ruined book.

    "The Wide Window (A Series of Unfortunate Events, Book 3)". Book by Lemony Snicket (pen name of Daniel Handler), February 25, 2000.
  • Adverbs is a book about love, and I thought that was pretty cheerful, but people who are reading it now are telling me that it's actually quite dark.

    Interview with Tasha Robinson, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2005.
  • Sometime during your life—in fact, very soon—you may find yourself reading a book, and you may notice that a book’s first sentence can often tell you what sort of story your book contains.

  • But the three siblings were not born yesterday. Violet was born more than fifteen years before this particular Wednesday, and Klaus was born approximately two years after that, and even Sunny, who had just passed out of babyhood, was not born yesterday. Neither were you, unless of course I am wrong, in which case welcome to the world, little baby, and congratulations on learning to read so early in life.

    "The Penultimate Peril (A Series of Unfortunate Events, Book 12)". Book by Lemony Snicket (pen name of Daniel Handler), October 18, 2005.
  • Everything. A letter may be coded, and a word may be coded. A theatrical performance may be coded, and a sonnet may be coded, and there are times when it seems the entire world is in code. Some believe that the world can be decoded by performing research in a library. Others believe that the world can be decoded by reading a newspaper. In my case, the only thing that made sense of the world was you, and without you the world will seem as garbled and tragic as a malfunctioning typewrit9.

    Library  
  • I first told the idea to an editor I had met who, after reading one of my novels for adults that was set in a high school, had an idea that I might write something for children.

    "Not My Job: Author Daniel Handler Gets Quizzed On Baggage Handlers". Interview with Peter Sagal, wvasfm.org. January 21, 2017.
  • Never trust anyone who has not brought a book with them.

  • If you feel . . . that well-read people are less likely to be evil, and a world full of people sitting quietly with good books in their hands is preferable to world filled with schisms and sirens and other noisy and troublesome things, then every time you enter a library you might say to yourself, 'The world is quiet here,' as a sort of pledge proclaiming reading to be the greater good.

  • I'm always loath to make generalizations about what is for children and what isn't. Certainly children's literature as a genre has some restrictions, so certain things will never pop up in a Snicket book. But I didn't know anything about writing for children when I started - this is the theme of naïveté creeping up on us once more - and I sort of still don't, and I'm happy that adults are reading them as well as children.

    Interview with Tasha Robinson, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2005.
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