William > William's Quotes

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  • #1
    David Foster Wallace
    “The truth will set you free. But not until it is finished with you.”
    David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest

  • #2
    David Foster Wallace
    “The so-called ‘psychotically depressed’ person who tries to kill herself doesn’t do so out of quote ‘hopelessness’ or any abstract conviction that life’s assets and debits do not square. And surely not because death seems suddenly appealing. The person in whom Its invisible agony reaches a certain unendurable level will kill herself the same way a trapped person will eventually jump from the window of a burning high-rise. Make no mistake about people who leap from burning windows. Their terror of falling from a great height is still just as great as it would be for you or me standing speculatively at the same window just checking out the view; i.e. the fear of falling remains a constant. The variable here is the other terror, the fire’s flames: when the flames get close enough, falling to death becomes the slightly less terrible of two terrors. It’s not desiring the fall; it’s terror of the flames. And yet nobody down on the sidewalk, looking up and yelling ‘Don’t!’ and ‘Hang on!’, can understand the jump. Not really. You’d have to have personally been trapped and felt flames to really understand a terror way beyond falling.”
    David Foster Wallace

  • #3
    David Foster Wallace
    “If you are bored and disgusted by politics and don't bother to vote, you are in effect voting for the entrenched Establishments of the two major parties, who please rest assured are not dumb, and who are keenly aware that it is in their interests to keep you disgusted and bored and cynical and to give you every possible reason to stay at home doing one-hitters and watching MTV on primary day. By all means stay home if you want, but don't bullshit yourself that you're not voting. In reality, there is no such thing as not voting: you either vote by voting, or you vote by staying home and tacitly doubling the value of some Diehard's vote.”
    David Foster Wallace, Up, Simbal!: 7 Days on the Trail of an Anticandidate

  • #4
    David Foster Wallace
    “Fiction is one of the few experiences where loneliness can be both confronted and relieved. Drugs, movies where stuff blows up, loud parties -- all these chase away loneliness by making me forget my name's Dave and I live in a one-by-one box of bone no other party can penetrate or know. Fiction, poetry, music, really deep serious sex, and, in various ways, religion -- these are the places (for me) where loneliness is countenanced, stared down, transfigured, treated.”
    David Foster Wallace

  • #5
    David Foster Wallace
    “Mario, what do you get when you cross an insomniac, an unwilling agnostic and a dyslexic?"

    "I give."

    "You get someone who stays up all night torturing himself mentally over the question of whether or not there's a dog.”
    David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest

  • #6
    David Foster Wallace
    “I'd tell you all you want and more, if the sounds I made could be what you hear”
    David Foster Wallace

  • #7
    David Foster Wallace
    “I don't think writers are any smarter than other people. I think they may be more compelling in their stupidity, or in their confusion.”
    David Foster Wallace

  • #8
    David Foster Wallace
    “Everybody is identical in their secret unspoken belief that way deep down they are different from everyone else.”
    David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest

  • #9
    David Foster Wallace
    “I'd like to be the sort of person who can enjoy things at the time, instead of having to go back in my head and enjoy them.”
    David Foster Wallace

  • #10
    David Foster Wallace
    “Everything I’ve ever let go of has claw marks on it.”
    David Foster Wallace

  • #11
    David Foster Wallace
    “But if I decide to decide there’s a different, less selfish, less lonely point to my life, won’t the reason for this decision be my desire to be less lonely, meaning to suffer less overall pain? Can the decision to be less selfish ever be anything other than a selfish decision?”
    David Foster Wallace, Consider the Lobster and Other Essays

  • #12
    David Foster Wallace
    “Worship your body, beauty, and sexual allure and you will die a million deaths before they finally grieve you.”
    David Foster Wallace

  • #13
    David Foster Wallace
    “I believe I want adult sanity, which seems to me the only unalloyed form of heroism available today.”
    David Foster Wallace

  • #14
    David Foster Wallace
    “Interviewer ...In the case of "American Psycho" I felt there was something more than just this desire to inflict pain--or that Ellis was being cruel the way you said serious artists need to be willing to be.

    DFW: You're just displaying the sort of cynicism that lets readers be manipulated by bad writing. I think it's a kind of black cynicism about today's world that Ellis and certain others depend on for their readership. Look, if the contemporary condition is hopelessly shitty, insipid, materialistic, emotionally retarded, sadomasochistic, and stupid, then I (or any writer) can get away with slapping together stories with characters who are stupid, vapid, emotionally retarded, which is easy, because these sorts of characters require no development. With descriptions that are simply lists of brand-name consumer products. Where stupid people say insipid stuff to each other. If what's always distinguished bad writing -- flat characters, a narrative world that's cliched and not recognizably human, etc. -- is also a description of today's world, then bad writing becomes an ingenious mimesis of a bad world. If readers simply believe the world is stupid and shallow and mean, then Ellis can write a mean shallow stupid novel that becomes a mordant deadpan commentary on the badness of everything. Look man, we'd probably most of us agree that these are dark times, and stupid ones, but do we need fiction that does nothing but dramatize how dark and stupid everything is? In dark times, the definition of good art would seem to be art that locates and applies CPR to those elements of what's human and magical that still live and glow despite the times' darkness. Really good fiction could have as dark a worldview as it wished, but it'd find a way both to depict this world and to illuminate the possibilities for being alive and human in it. You can defend "Psycho" as being a sort of performative digest of late-eighties social problems, but it's no more than that.”
    David Foster Wallace

  • #15
    David Foster Wallace
    “Good fiction’s job is to comfort the disturbed and disturb the comfortable.”
    David Foster Wallace

  • #16
    David Foster Wallace
    “Every love story is a ghost story.”
    David Foster Wallace, The Pale King

  • #17
    David Foster Wallace
    “The true thoughts that go on inside us are just too fast and huge and all interconnected for words to do more than barely sketch the outlines of, at most, one tiny little part of us at any given instant.”
    David Foster Wallace

  • #18
    David Foster Wallace
    “To make someone an icon is to make him an abstraction, and abstractions are incapable of vital communication with living people.”
    David Foster Wallace, Consider the Lobster and Other Essays

  • #19
    David Foster Wallace
    “So which is the lie? Hard or soft? Silence or time?”
    David Foster Wallace

  • #20
    David Foster Wallace
    “There are very few innocent sentences in writing.”
    David Foster Wallace

  • #21
    David Foster Wallace
    “God seems to have a kind of laid-back management style I’m not crazy about.”
    David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest

  • #22
    David Foster Wallace
    “... That no single, individual moment is in and of itself unendurable.”
    David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest

  • #23
    David Foster Wallace
    “Lonely people tend, rather, to be lonely because they decline to bear the psychic costs of being around other humans. They are allergic to people. People affect them too strongly.”
    David Foster Wallace, A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again: Essays and Arguments

  • #24
    David Foster Wallace
    “No wonder we cannot appreciate the really central Kafka joke: that the horrific struggle to establish a human self results in a self whose humanity is inseparable from the horrific struggle. That our endless and impossible journey toward home is in fact our home.”
    David Foster Wallace, Consider the Lobster and Other Essays

  • #25
    David Foster Wallace
    “Hell hath no fury like a coolly received postmodernist.”
    David Foster Wallace, Girl With Curious Hair

  • #26
    David Foster Wallace
    “...we live in an era of terrible preoccupation with presentation and interpretation, one in which relations between who someone is and what he believes and how he "expresses himself" have been thrown into big time flux.”
    David Foster Wallace, Consider the Lobster and Other Essays

  • #27
    David Foster Wallace
    “That everything is on fire, slow fire, and we're all less than a million breaths away from an oblivion more total than we can even bring ourselves to even try to imagine...”
    David Foster Wallace, The Pale King

  • #28
    David Foster Wallace
    “The assumption that you everyone else is like you. That you are the world. The disease of consumer capitalism. The complacent solipsism.”
    David Foster Wallace, The Pale King

  • #29
    David Foster Wallace
    “Almost nothing important that ever happens to you happens because you engineer it.”
    David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest

  • #30
    David Foster Wallace
    “There are secrets within secrets, though--always.”
    David Foster Wallace, The Pale King



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