Donald E. Westlake Quotes

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All quotes by Donald E. Westlake: Books Character Choices Crime Eyes Giving Language Writing more...
  • The only thing I learned from the architecture is keep the bathroom and the kitchen near each other, so you don't have to run pipes all over the place.

    Source: www.avclub.com
  • If it weren't for received ideas, the publishing industry wouldn't have any ideas at all.

    The Book Reporter interview, www.bookreporter.com. April 21, 2000.
  • It's so difficult, particularly with an antisocial character. It's much easier if he's already a blank page, but once you've written on him, it's hard to keep him that stripped down.

    Interview with Christopher Bahn, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2006.
  • One of our continuing myths was summed up in Huckleberry Finn: Our escape, what we think of as our escape, is that we can always light out for the territories. Well, we really can't, not anymore, but that's part of the American character - that belief that at any moment, I could just drop the coffee cup and disappear. And it makes for a different self-image and a different story, in a way.

    Interview with Christopher Bahn, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2006.
  • If your subject is crime, then you know at least that you're going to have a real story. If your subject is the maturing of a college boy, you may never stumble across a story while you're telling that. But if your story is a college boy dead in his dorm room, you know there's a story in there, someplace.

    Interview with Christopher Bahn, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2006.
  • I do bookstore signings, and it seems to me that I get a variety of men and women, more women than I'd expect, and grown-ups among my readers.

    Interview with Christopher Bahn, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2006.
  • Science fiction is a weird category, because it's the only area of fiction I can think of where the story is not of primary importance. Science fiction tends to be more about the science, or the invention of the fantasy world, or the political allegory. When I left science fiction, I said "They're more interested in planets, and I'm interested in people."

    People  
    Interview with Christopher Bahn, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2006.
  • I know people who have suffered writer's block, and I don't think I've ever had it. A friend of mine, for three years he couldn't write. And he said that he thought of stories and he knew the stories, could see the stories completely, but he could never find the door. Somehow that first sentence was never there. And without the door, he couldn't do the story. I've never experienced that. But it's a chilling thought.

    Interview with Christopher Bahn, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2006.
  • Those 4 guys in the late 60's who attacked a jewel merchant on New York's West 46th St. on the sidewalk, so they could steal his jewel-filled station wagon, which they abandoned 2 blocks later because none of them could drive a stick shift. Where would I be without such people?

  • Hoke Moseley is a magnificently battered hero. Willeford brings him to us lean and hard and brand-new.

  • A grifter's got an irresistible urge to be the guy who's wise. There's nothin' to whipping a fool. Hell, fools are made to be whipped. But to take another pro. Even your partner, who knows you and has his eye on you. That's a score! No matter what happens.

  • Nobody gets everything in this life. You decide your priorities and you make your choices. I'd decided long ago that any cake I had would be eaten.

    "Two Much". Book by Donald E. Westlake (Chapter 21), 1975.
  • In the first batch of readers, back in the '60s and '70s, the criminal class was still literate, so I would get letters from people in prison; they thought that I was somebody whom they could shop-talk with, and they would tell me very funny stories. I got a lot of those. Guys who were going to wind up doing 10 to 15 for bank robbery, yes, were reading my books.

    Book   Reading   People  
    Source: www.avclub.com
  • The other thing that I got back then - the Parker novels have never had much of anything to do with race. There have been a few black characters here and there, but the first batch of books back then, I got a lot of letters from urban black guys in their 20s, 30s, 40s. What were they seeing that they were reacting to? And I think I finally figured it out - at that time, they were guys who felt very excluded from society, that they had been rejected by the greater American world.

    Book  
    Interview with Christopher Bahn, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2006.
  • For a long while, I found Parker impossible. He went away for 23 years. I tried to bring him back a few times, and I sort of figured out where he came from, why he went away, and why he came back. The thing that I have to tap into for Parker is in some way the outsider. If I can tap into the outsider, I can write about Parker, and if I can't, I can't.

    Interview with Christopher Bahn, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2006.
  • My wife says in Richard Stark's world, the honest citizens are goofy. Okay, they are. I don't know if it's good or bad, but because he's outside his own world, it sort of freed up the environment around him to be a little more looser and goofier.

    Source: www.avclub.com
  • Publishing is the only industry I can think of where most of the employees spend most of their time stating with great self-assurance that they don't know how to do their jobs. "I don't know how to sell this," they explain, frowning, as though it's your fault. "I don't know how to package this. I don't know what the market is for this book. I don't know how we're going to draw attention to this." In most occupations, people try to hide their incompetence; only in publishing is it flaunted as though it were the chief qualification for the job.

    Book  
  • I was writing everything. I grew up in Albany, New York, and I was never any farther west than Syracuse, and I wrote Westerns. I wrote tiny little slices of life, sent them off to The Sewanee Review, and they always sent them back. For the first 10 years I was published, I'd say, "I'm a writer disguised as a mystery writer." But then I look back, and well, maybe I'm a mystery writer. You tend to go where you're liked, so when the mysteries were being published, I did more of them.

    Interview with Christopher Bahn, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2006.
  • Seem to be telling this, but really telling that. Three-dimensional writing, like three-dimensional chess. Nabokov was the other master of that. You could learn something from Nabokov on every page he ever wrote.

    The Book Reporter interview, www.bookreporter.com. April 21, 2000.
  • Years ago, I heard an interview with violinist Yehudi Menuhin. The interviewer said, "Do you still practice?" And he said, "I practice every day." He said, "If I skip a day, I can hear it. If I skip two days, the conductor can hear it. And if I skip three days, the audience can hear it." Oh, yes, you have to keep that muscle firm.

    Interview with Christopher Bahn, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2006.
  • My mother believed in all superstitions, plus she made some up.

  • What advice I would give to anybody about anything. Life is a slow-motion avalanche, and none of us are steering." (When asked in an interview about what question he's tired of being asked.)

  • Christmas shows us the ties that bind us together, threads of love and caring, woven in the simplest and strongest way within the family.

  • Writing is flat, so if you only have part of one eye working, you still can do the job. It's just that you sit there and you're angry, which doesn't help.

    Interview with Christopher Bahn, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2006.
  • The trouble with real life is, there's no reset button.

    Donald E Westlake (2011). “Drowned Hopes”, p.264, Overamstel Uitgevers
  • What did Jesus Christ say to the Teamsters? 'Do nothing till I get back.

    Lawrence Block, John Farris, Stephen King, Walter Mosley, Joyce Carol Oates (2005). “Transgressions: Ten Novellas from Transgressions”, p.29, Macmillan
  • I've had stuff of mine adapted by other people, so I've come to the conclusion that a movie is a different form from a novel and there is no such thing as a true adaptation. You have to adapt to this other thing and do it right. But that voice of the original should somehow still be there, and the original intent should still be there. So if the original writer saw the movie, the writer would say, "Well, that's not what I wrote, but that's what I meant." And if you can do that, I think you've done your job as a screenwriter.

    People  
    Interview with Christopher Bahn, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2006.
  • The thing that I prefer, when I'm working on a book, is to do a seven-day week, because it's easy to lose some of the details of what you're doing along the way.

    Book  
    Interview with Christopher Bahn, www.avclub.com. November 16, 2006.
  • In order to hold your faith intact be sure it's kept unsullied by fact.

    "Don't Ask". Book by Donald E. Westlake, April 1993.
  • I loved it, but social reality impeded. Now I wander in here at 9 in the morning or so, and come back for a while in the afternoon. I am a very lenient boss.

    The Book Reporter interview, www.bookreporter.com. April 21, 2000.
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  • We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 63 quotes from the Writer Donald E. Westlake, starting from July 12, 1933! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
    Donald E. Westlake quotes about: Books Character Choices Crime Eyes Giving Language Writing