Doris Lessing Quotes About Writing

We have collected for you the TOP of Doris Lessing's best quotes about Writing! Here are collected all the quotes about Writing starting from the birthday of the Novelist – October 22, 1919! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 22 sayings of Doris Lessing about Writing. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • The whole process of writing is a setting at a distance. That is the value of it - to the writer, and to the people who read the results of this process, which takes the raw, the individual, the uncriticized, the unexamined, into the realm of the general.

    Doris May Lessing (1994). “Under my skin”
  • I don't know much about creative writing programs. But they're not telling the truth if they don't teach, one, that writing is hard work and, two, that you have to give up a great deal of life, your personal life, to be a writer.

    "Mrs. Lessing Addresses Some of Life's Puzzles". Interview with Herbert Mitgang, archive.nytimes.com. April 22, 1984.
  • I write because I've always written, can't stop. I am a writing animal. The way a silk worm is a silk-producing animal.

  • A public library is the most democratic thing in the world. What can be found there has undone dictators and tyrants: demagogues can persecute writers and tell them what to write as much as they like, but they cannot vanish what has been written in the past, though they try often enough...People who love literature have at least part of their minds immune from indoctrination. If you read, you can learn to think for yourself.

  • I do not think writers or anybody would sit down and think they must write about some cause, or theme, or something. If they write about their own experiences, something true is going to emerge.

    "Literature Nobel Awarded to Writer Doris Lessing". "All Things Considered" with Lynn Neary, www.npr.org. October 11, 2007.
  • You should write, first of all, to please yourself. You shouldn't care a damn about anybody else at all. But writing can't be a way of life - the important part of writing is living. You have to live in such a way that your writing emerges from it.

    Doris May Lessing (1996). “Putting questions differently: interviews with Doris Lessing, 1964-1994”
  • I'm very unhappy when I'm not writing.

  • I don't think in terms of optimism and pessimism when writing a story. I am telling a story.

  • And it does no harm to repeat, as often as you can, 'Without me the literary industry would not exist: the publishers, the agents, the sub-agents, the sub-sub-agents, the accountants, the libel lawyers, the departments of literature, the professors, the theses, the books of criticism, the reviewers, the book pages- all this vast and proliferating edifice is because of this small, patronized, put-down and underpaid person.'

  • What of course I would like to be writing is the story of the Red and White Dwarves and their Remembering Mirror, their space rocket (powered by anti-gravity), their attendant entities Hadron, Gluon, Pion, Lepton, and Muon, and the Charmed Quarks and the Coloured Quarks. But we can't all be physicists.

    Doris Lessing (2012). “The Sirian Experiments (Canopus in Argos: Archives Series, Book 3)”, p.8, HarperCollins UK
  • At last I understood that the way over, or through this dilemma, the unease at writing about 'petty personal problems' was to recognize that nothing is personal, in the sense that it is uniquely one's own. Writing about oneself, one is writing about others, since your problems, pains, pleasures, emotions—and your extraordinary and remarkable ideas—can't be yours alone. [...] Growing up is after all only the understanding that one's unique and incredible experience is what everyone shares.

  • In the writing process, the more the story cooks, the better. The brain works for you even when you are at rest. I find dreams particularly useful. I myself think a great deal before I go to sleep and the details sometimes unfold in the dream.

    "Mrs. Lessing Addresses Some of Life's Puzzles". Interview with Herbert Mitgang, archive.nytimes.com. April 22, 1984.
  • In the writing process, the more a story cooks, the better.

    "Routine inquiries: what goes into a writing 'process'?" by Jean Hannah Edelstein, www.theguardian.com. November 11, 2008.
  • Sometimes I pick up a book and I say: Well, so you've written it first, have you? Good for you. O.K., then I won't have to write it.

    Doris May Lessing (1981). “The Golden Notebook”, Bantam
  • I've always disliked words like inspiration. Writing is probably like a scientist thinking about some scientific problem, or an engineer about an engineering problem.

  • I wanted to write about my mother as she should have been if she had not been messed up by World War I.

  • It's amazing what you find out about yourself when you write in the first person about someone very different from you.

    "Doris Lessing, The Art of Fiction No. 102". Interview with Thomas Frick, The Paris Review, Issue 106, www.theparisreview.org. Spring 1988.
  • Sometimes I think what I write is funny in its quiet way.

  • You only learn to be a better writer by actually writing.

  • There are no laws for the novel. There never have been, nor can there ever be.

    "Writers on Writing". Book by Jon Winokur, 1986.
  • There is no doubt fiction makes a better job of the truth.

    "Under My Skin". Book by Doris Lessing, www.theguardian.com. 1994.
  • The difficulty of writing about sex, for women, is that sex is best when not thought about, not analysed.

    Doris May Lessing (1994). “The Golden Notebook”, HarperCollins Publishers
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