Quotes About Writing
I was trying to learn to write, commencing with the simplest things, and one of the simplest things of all and the most fundamental is violent death.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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Organizations for writers palliate the writer's loneliness, but I doubt if they improve his writing.... For he does his work alone and if he is a good enough writer he must face eternity, or the lack of it, each day.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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The writer must write what he has to say, not speak it.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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In truly good writing no matter how many times you read it you do not know how it is done. That is beacause there is a mystery in all great writing and that mystery does not dis-sect out. It continues and it is always valid. Each time you re-read you see or learn something new.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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Some writers are only born to help another writer write one sentence.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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I was trying to write then and I found the greatest difficulty, aside from knowing what you really felt, rather that what you were supposed to feel, and had been taught to feel, was to put down what really happened in action; what the actual things which produced the emotion that you experienced...
~ Ernest Hemingway
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There is seven-eights of it under water for every part that shows. Anything you know you can eliminate and it only strengthens your iceberg. It is the part that doesn't show. If a writer omits something because he does not know it then there is a hole in the story. (Interview with Paris Review , 1958)
~ Ernest Hemingway
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You know you're writing well when you're throwing good stuff into the wastebasket.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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Writing is something that you can never do as well as it can be done. It is a perpetual challenge and it is more difficult than anything else that I have ever done—so I do it. And it makes me happy when I do it well.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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There was so much to write. He had seen the world change; not just the events; although he had seen many of them and had watched the people, but he had seen the subtler change and he could remember how the people were at different times. He had been in it and he had watched it and it was his duty to write of it; but now he never would.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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I love to write. But it has never gotten any easier to do and you can't expect it to if you keep trying for something better than you can do.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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Wearing down seven number-two pencils is a good day's work.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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A writer's job is to tell the truth. His standard of fidelity to the truth should be so high that his invention, out of his experience, should produce a truer account than anything factual can be. For facts can be observed badly; but when a good writer is creating something, he has time and scope to make an absolute truth.6
~ Ernest Hemingway
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The story was writing itself and I was having a hard time keeping up with it.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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if I had waited long enough I probably never would have written anything at all since there is a tendency when you really begin to learn something about a thing not to want to write about it but rather to keep on learning about it always and at no time, unless you are very egotistical, which, of course, accounts for many books, will you be able to say: now I know all about this and will write about it.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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It's this way, see--when a writer first starts out, he gets a big kick from the stuff he does, and the reader doesn't get any;then, after a while, the writer gets a little kick and the reader gets a little kick; and finally, if the writer's any good, he doesn't get any kick at all and the reader gets everything.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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Tell him I think writing is lousy, Bill said. Go on, tell him. Tell him I'm ashamed of being a writer.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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There is no such thing as great writing - there is only great re-writing!
~ Ernest Hemingway
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The best way is always to stop when you are going good and when you know what will happen next. If you do that every day when you are writing a novel you will never be stuck. That is the most valuable thing I can tell you so try to remember it.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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The blue-backed notebooks, the two pencils and the pencil sharpener (a pocket knife was too wasteful) the marble-topped tables, the smell of early morning, sweeping out and mopping, and luck were all you needed. For luck you carried a horse chestnut and a rabbit's foot in your right pocket. The fur had been worn off the rabbit's foot long ago and the bones and the sinews were polished by wear. The claws scratched in the lining of your pocket and you knew your luck was still there.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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I sometimes think my style is suggestive rather than direct. The reader must often use his imagination or lose the most subtle part of my thought.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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Like all men with a faculty that surpasses human requirements, his father was very nervous. Then, too, he was sentimental, and, like most sentimental people, he was both cruel and abused. Also, he had much bad luck, and it was not all of it his own. He had died in a trap that he had helped only a little to set, and they had all betrayed him in their various ways before he died. All sentimental people are betrayed so many times. Nick could not write about him yet, although he would, later
~ Ernest Hemingway
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For this, that now was coming, he had very little curiosity. For years it had obseessed him; but now it meant nothing in itself. It was strange how easy being tired enough made it. Now he would never write the things he had saved to write, until he knew enough to write them well
~ Ernest Hemingway
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How good a book is should be judged by the man who writes it by the excellence of the material that he eliminates.
~ Ernest Hemingway
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