Mordecai Richler Quotes

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  • If you don't count some of Jehovah's injunctions, there are no humorists in the Bible.

    Mordecai Richler (1983). “The Best of modern humor”, Alfred a Knopf Inc
  • Listen your Lordship, I'm a respecter of institutions. Even in Paris, I remained a Canadian. I puffed hashish, but I didn't inhale.

    St. Urbain's Horseman ch. 2 (1971) See Bill Clinton 14
  • The revolution eats its own. Capitalism re-creates itself.

    Mordecai Richler (2010). “Cocksure”, p.142, Emblem Editions
  • My enduring feeling about René Lévesque is that if he had chosen to hang me, even as he tightened the rope round my neck, he would have complained about how humiliating it was for him to spring the trapdoor. And then, once I was swinging in the wind, he would blame my ghost for having obliged him to murder, thereby imposing a guilt trip on a sweet, self-effacing, downtrodden Francophone.

  • So far as one can generalize, the most graciouis, cultivated, and innovative people in this country are French Canadians. Certainly they have given us the most exciting politicians of our time: Trudeau, Lévesque. Without them, Canada would be an exceedingly boring and greatly diminished place.

    Mordecai Richler (1992). “Oh Canada! Oh Quebec!: requiem for a divided country”, Alfred a Knopf Inc
  • Mr. Bernard died on a Monday, at the age of seventy-five, his body wasted. He lay in state for two days in the lobby of the Bernard Gursky Tower and, as he failed to rise on the third, he was duly buried.

  • For the record, pot, like the Reader's Digest , is not necessarily habit-forming, but both can lead to hard-core addiction : heroin, in one case, abridged bad books, in the other. Either way you look at it, a withdrawal from a meaningful life.

    Mordecai Richler (1974). “Notes on an endangered species and others”, Alfred A. Knopf
  • There are ten commandments, right? Well, it's like an exam. You get eight out of ten, you're just about top of the class.

  • I obviously prefer writing novels but I take my journalism very seriously, and I enjoy doing it between novels. It gives me an opportunity to move in the outside world.

  • There are three sides to every argument. Yours. The other guy's. And the right side.

    Mordecai Richler (1955). “Son of a smaller hero: a novel”
  • Nothing is absolute any longer. There is a choice of beliefs and a choice of truths to go with them. If you choose not to choose then there is no truth at all. There are only points of view.

    Mordecai Richler (1955). “Son of a smaller hero: a novel”
  • If you caricature friends in your first novel they will be upset, but if you don't they will feel betrayed.

  • When a child is born, I once explained to the kids, some dads lay down bottles of wine for them that will mature when they grow up into ungrateful adults. Instead, what you're going to get from me, as each of you turns sixteen, is a library of the one hundred books that gave me the most pleasure when I was a know-nothing adolescent.

  • I have always been skeptical of medical orthodoxies, because sooner, rather than later, so many of them are turned on their heads. Or, put another way, providing you are prepared to wait it out, what was adjudged bad for you yesterday is likely to prove beneficial today.

  • The Canadian kid who wants to grow up to be Prime Minister isn't thinking big, he is setting a limit to his ambitions rather early.

    Quoted in Time (Canadian ed.), 31 May 1971
  • A novel may take anywhere from two to five years to write and, in the end, you might manage a couple of thousand dollars on it, no more.

  • Actually, when it comes to knocking the Canadian cultural scene, nobody outdoes Canadians, myself included. We are veritable masters of self-deprecation.

    Mordecai Richler (1970). “Canadian writing today”, Penguin Books
  • Beauty, like male ballet dancers, makes some men afraid.

  • Fiorito has all the right stuff. His splendid memoir about his relationship with his dying father belongs on that small shelf with Philip Roth's Patrimony and Frank McCourt's Angela's Ashes.

  • This is an age of scientific wonders. You miss somebody so you pick up the phone to say hello. Three minutes for sixty-five cents. Nobody goes broke.

    Mordecai Richler (1999). “The Apprenticeship Of Duddy Kravitz”, p.325, Simon and Schuster
  • I'm world-famous ... all over Canada.

  • If you're writing a novel, you're in a room for three or four years. There's not much coming in from the outside.

  • Tomorrow country then, tomorrow country now.

    Mordecai Richler, Jonathan Webb, Aislin, Adam Gopnik (2007). “Mordecai Richler Was Here: Selected Writings”, Da Capo Press
  • Edmonton is not the end of the world but you can certainly see it from there.

  • A boy can be two, three, four potential people, but a man is only one. He murders the others.

    Mordecai Richler (1999). “The Apprenticeship Of Duddy Kravitz”, p.328, Simon and Schuster
  • Canada is one of the few places left where the small decencies are observed. If, as a young man, I was scornful of the country because we always seemed so far behind style-setting New York, I now thank God for the cultural lag. Ours, after all, is the good neighbourhood. A society well worth preserving.

  • I'm criticized by the feminists, by the Jewish establishment, by Canadian nationalists. And why not? I've had my pot shots at them. I'm fair game.

  • Well, people have been wondering what's going to happen to the novel for two hundred years; its death has been announced many times. You know, I think the novel keeps redefining the world we live in. What you should look for in a novel is a window nobody else is looking out of, that nobody else can look through. What you look for is a voice. You pick up a novel by someone such as Faulkner or Hemingway and you just read three pages and you know who wrote it. And that's what one should demand of a novelist.

  • Well, when I was a young writer the people we read were Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Sartre, Camus, Celine, Malraux. And to begin with, I was a bit of a copycat writer and very derivative and tried to write a novel using their voices, really.... I keep it out of print.

  • I don't hold with shamans, witch doctors, or psychiatrists. Shakespeare, Tolstoy, or even Dickens, understood more about the human condition than ever occurred to any of you. You overrated bunch of charlatans deal with the grammar of human problems, and the writers I've mentioned with the essence.

    "Personal Quotes/ Biography". www.imdb.com.
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  • We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 42 quotes from the Author Mordecai Richler, starting from January 27, 1931! 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!
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