John Steinbeck Quotes About Home

We have collected for you the TOP of John Steinbeck's best quotes about Home! Here are collected all the quotes about Home starting from the birthday of the Author – February 27, 1902! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 10 sayings of John Steinbeck about Home. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • A man who tells secrets or stories must think of who is hearing or reading, for a story has as many versions as it has readers. Everyone takes what he wants or can from it and thus changes it to his measure. Some pick out parts and reject the rest, some strain the story through their mesh of prejudice, some paint it with their own delight. A story must have some points of contact with the reader to make him feel at home in it. Only then can he accept wonders.

    John Steinbeck (2007). “Travels with Charley and Later Novels, 1947-1962”
  • Charley is a mind-reading dog. There have been many trips in his lifetime, and often he has to be left at home. He knows we are going long before the suitcase has come out, and he paces and worries and whines and goes into a state of mild hysteria.

    John Steinbeck (1980). “Travels with Charley in Search of America”, p.12, Penguin
  • The cars of the migrant people crawled out of the side roads onto the great cross-country highway, and they took the migrant way to the West.... And because they were lonely and perplexed, because they had all come from a place of sadness and worry and defeat, and because they were all going to a mysterious new place, ... a strange thing happened: the twenty families became one family, the children were the children of all. The loss of home became one loss, and the golden time in the West was one dream.

  • Once you have lived in New York and made it your home, no place else is good enough

  • I have lost all sense of home, having moved about so much. It means to me now--only that place where the books are kept.

  • The first grave. Now we're getting someplace. Houses and children and graves, that's home, Tom. Those are the things that hold a man down.

    John Steinbeck (1995). “To a God Unknown”, p.70, Penguin
  • I am writing this from what we Americans call Yurrp. In Yurrp writers are taken as seriously as Lana Turner's legs are in America - a ridiculous situation.

  • You can't go home again because home has ceased to exist except in the mothballs of memory.

    John Steinbeck (1980). “Travels with Charley in Search of America”, p.163, Penguin
  • New York is an ugly city, a dirty city. Its climate is a scandal, its politics are used to frighten children, its traffic is madness, its competition is murderous. But there is one thing about it - once you have lived in New York and it has become your home, no place else is good enough.

    John Steinbeck (2003). “America and Americans and Selected Nonfiction”, p.44, Penguin
  • Maybe it's true that we are all descended from the restless, the nervous, the criminals, the arguers and brawlers, but also the brave and independent and generous. If our ancestors had not been that, they would have stayed in their home plots in the other world and starved over the squeezed-out soil.

    John Steinbeck (2002). “East of Eden”, p.499, Penguin
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