β
If you work really hard, and you're kind, amazing things will happen.
β
β
Conan O'Brien
β
That's what fiction is for. It's for getting at the truth when the truth isn't sufficient for the truth.
β
β
Tim O'Brien
β
In our deepest moments we say the most inadequate things.
β
β
Edna O'Brien (A Fanatic Heart: Selected Stories)
β
Darkness is drawn to light, but light does not know it; light must absorb the darkness and therefore meet its own extinguishment.
β
β
Edna O'Brien (In the Forest)
β
They carried the sky. The whole atmosphere, they carried it, the humidity, the monsoons, the stink of fungus and decay, all of it, they carried gravity.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
A study in the Washington Post says that women have
better verbal skills than men. I just want to say to the
authors of that study: 'Duh.
β
β
Conan O'Brien
β
Winston Smith: Does Big Brother exist?
O'Brien: Of course he exists.
Winston Smith: Does he exist like you or me?
O'Brien: You do not exist.
β
β
George Orwell (1984)
β
A thing may happen and be a total lie; another thing may not happen and be truer than the truth.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
But the thing about remembering is that you don't forget.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
They carried all they could bear, and then some, including a silent awe for the terrible power of the things they carried.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
All I ask is one thing, and Iβm asking this particularly of young people: please donβt be cynical. I hate cynicism, for the record, itβs my least favorite quality and it doesnβt lead anywhere. Nobody in life gets exactly what they thought they were going to get. But if you work really hard and youβre kind, amazing things will happen.
β
β
Conan O'Brien
β
I want you to feel what I felt. I want you to know why story-truth is truer sometimes than happening-truth.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
The thing about a story is that you dream it as you tell it, hoping that others might then dream along with you, and in this way memory and imagination and language combine to make spirits in the head. There is the illusion of aliveness.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
Stories are for joining the past to the future. Stories are for those late hours in the night when you can't remember how you got from where you were to where you are. Stories are for eternity, when memory is erased, when there is nothing to remember except the story.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
I survived, but it's not a happy ending.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
When all else fails, there's always delusion.
β
β
Conan O'Brien
β
you're never more alive than when you're almost dead.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
But this too is true: stories can save us.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
But in a story, which is a kind of dreaming, the dead sometimes smile and sit up and return to the world.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
A true war story is never moral. It does not instruct, nor encourage virtue, nor suggest models of proper human behavior, nor restrain men from doing the things men have always done. If a story seems moral, do not believe it. If at the end of a war story you feel uplifted, or if you feel that some small bit of rectitude has been salvaged from the larger waste, then you have been made the victim of a very old and terrible lie. There is no rectitude whatsoever. There is no virtue. As a first rule of thumb, therefore, you can tell a true war story by its absolute and uncompromising allegiance to obscenity and evil.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
It was very sad, he thought. The things men carried inside. The things men did or felt they had to do.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
Fiction is the lie that helps us understand the truth.
β
β
Tim O'Brien
β
What sticks to memory, often, are those odd little fragments that have no beginning and no end...
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
We love the night and its quiet; and there is no night that we love so well as that on which the moon is coffined in clouds.
β
β
Fitz-James O'Brien (Classic Ghost Stories by Wilkie Collins, M.R. James, Charles Dickens and Others)
β
When anyone asks me about the Irish character, I say look at the trees. Maimed, stark and misshapen, but ferociously tenacious.
β
β
Edna O'Brien
β
War is hell, but that's not the half of it, because war is also mystery and terror and adventure and courage and discovery and holiness and pity and despair and longing and love. War is nasty; war is fun. War is thrilling; war is drudgery. War makes you a man; war makes you dead.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
Your talk," I said, "is surely the handiwork of wisdom because not one word of it do I understand.
β
β
Flann O'Brien (The Third Policeman)
β
He wished he could've explained some of this. How he had been braver than he ever thought possible, but how he had not been so brave as he wanted to be. The distinction was important.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
You asked me once,' said O'Brien, 'what was in Room 101. I told you that you knew the answer already. Everyone knows it. The thing that is in Room 101 is the worst thing in the world.
β
β
George Orwell (1984)
β
There are some things, once they are done, that we can never question, because if we did, we wouldn't be able to go on. And we have to go on, every single day.
β
β
Caragh M. O'Brien (Birthmarked (Birthmarked, #1))
β
A lie, sometimes, can be truer than the truth, which is why fiction gets written.
β
β
Tim O'Brien
β
his love was too much for him, he felt paralyzed, he wanted to sleep inside her lungs and breathe her blood and be smothered.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
It wasn't a question of deceit. Just the opposite; he wanted to heat up the truth, to make it burn so hot that you would feel exactly what he felt.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
I saw that my witticism was unperceived and quietly replaced it in the treasury of my mind.
β
β
Flann O'Brien (At Swim-Two-Birds)
β
Experience has taught me that what you love, you should love all the harder because someday it will be gone.
β
β
Ronan O'Brien (Confessions of a Fallen Angel)
β
It is our failure to become our perceived ideal that ultimately defines us and makes us unique. It's not easy, but if you accept your misfortune and handle it right your perceived failure can become a catalyst for profound re-invention.
β
β
Conan O'Brien
β
I was a coward. I went to the war.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
My favorite comedy is comedy where nothing is achieved and there is no point.
β
β
Conan O'Brien
β
The top two movies at the box office this weekend were 'High School Musical 3' and 'Saw V.'
One movie features gruesome onscreen torture that is difficult to watch and the other is about a guy with a saw.
β
β
Conan O'Brien
β
And in the end, of course, a true war story is never about war. It's about sunlight. It's about the special way that dawn spreads out on a river when you know you must cross the river and march into the mountains and do things you are afraid to do. It's about love and memory. It's about sorrow. It's about sisters who never write back and people who never listen.
β
β
Tim O'Brien
β
you can tell a true war story if it embarrasses you. If you don't care for obscenity, you don't care for the truth; if you don't care for the truth, watch how you vote. Send guys to war, they come home talking dirty.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
It was my view then, and still is, that you don't make war without knowing why. Knowledge of course, is always imperfect, but it seemed to me that when a nation goes to war it must have reasonable confidence in the justice and imperative of its cause. You can't fix your mistakes. Once people are dead, you can't make them undead.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
Not living your life is just like killing yourself, only it takes longer.
β
β
A.S. King (Glory O'Brien's History of the Future)
β
And sometimes remembering will lead to a story, which makes it forever. That's what stories are for. Stories are for joining the past to the future. Stories are for those late hours in the night when you can't remember how you got from where you were to where you are. Stories are for eternity, when memory is erased, when there is nothing to remember except the story.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
Even the worst feeling, with time and familiarity, became tolerable.
β
β
Caragh M. O'Brien (Birthmarked (Birthmarked, #1))
β
There is nothing more liberating than having your worst fear realized.
β
β
Conan O'Brien
β
I just want to say to the kids out there watching: You can do anything you want in life. Unless Jay Leno wants to do it too.
β
β
Conan O'Brien
β
Applaud my idiocy.
β
β
Conan O'Brien
β
A wise old owl once lived in a wood, the more he heard the less he said, the less he said the more he heard, let's emulate that wise old bird.
β
β
Flann O'Brien (At Swim-Two-Birds)
β
Everything was such a damned nice idea when it was an idea.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (Northern Lights)
β
Marginalia
Sometimes the notes are ferocious,
skirmishes against the author
raging along the borders of every page
in tiny black script.
If I could just get my hands on you,
Kierkegaard, or Conor Cruise O'Brien,
they seem to say,
I would bolt the door and beat some logic into your head.
Other comments are more offhand, dismissive -
Nonsense." "Please!" "HA!!" -
that kind of thing.
I remember once looking up from my reading,
my thumb as a bookmark,
trying to imagine what the person must look like
who wrote "Don't be a ninny"
alongside a paragraph in The Life of Emily Dickinson.
Students are more modest
needing to leave only their splayed footprints
along the shore of the page.
One scrawls "Metaphor" next to a stanza of Eliot's.
Another notes the presence of "Irony"
fifty times outside the paragraphs of A Modest Proposal.
Or they are fans who cheer from the empty bleachers,
Hands cupped around their mouths.
Absolutely," they shout
to Duns Scotus and James Baldwin.
Yes." "Bull's-eye." "My man!"
Check marks, asterisks, and exclamation points
rain down along the sidelines.
And if you have managed to graduate from college
without ever having written "Man vs. Nature"
in a margin, perhaps now
is the time to take one step forward.
We have all seized the white perimeter as our own
and reached for a pen if only to show
we did not just laze in an armchair turning pages;
we pressed a thought into the wayside,
planted an impression along the verge.
Even Irish monks in their cold scriptoria
jotted along the borders of the Gospels
brief asides about the pains of copying,
a bird singing near their window,
or the sunlight that illuminated their page-
anonymous men catching a ride into the future
on a vessel more lasting than themselves.
And you have not read Joshua Reynolds,
they say, until you have read him
enwreathed with Blake's furious scribbling.
Yet the one I think of most often,
the one that dangles from me like a locket,
was written in the copy of Catcher in the Rye
I borrowed from the local library
one slow, hot summer.
I was just beginning high school then,
reading books on a davenport in my parents' living room,
and I cannot tell you
how vastly my loneliness was deepened,
how poignant and amplified the world before me seemed,
when I found on one page
A few greasy looking smears
and next to them, written in soft pencil-
by a beautiful girl, I could tell,
whom I would never meet-
Pardon the egg salad stains, but I'm in love.
β
β
Billy Collins (Picnic, Lightning)
β
I told graduates to not be afraid to fail, and I still believe that. But today I tell you that whether you fear it or not, disappointment will come. The beauty is that through disappointment you can gain clarity, and with clarity comes conviction and true originality.
β
β
Conan O'Brien
β
Nobody in life gets exactly what they thought they were going to get. But if you work really hard and youβre kind, amazing things will happen.
β
β
Conan O'Brien
β
Together we understood what terror was: you're not human anymore. You're a shadow. You slip out of your own skin, like molting, shedding your own history and your own future, leaving behind everything you ever were or wanted to believed in. You know you're about to die. And it's not a movie and you aren't a hero and all you can do is whimper and wait.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
Starbucks says they are going to start putting religious quotes on cups. The very first one will say, "Jesus! This cup is expensive!
β
β
Conan O'Brien
β
I am completely half afraid to think.
β
β
Flann O'Brien (The Third Policeman)
β
What you think is the point is not the point at all but only the beginning of the sharpness.
β
β
Flann O'Brien (The Third Policeman)
β
But I do like churches. The way it feels inside. It feels good when you just sit there, like you're in a forest and everything's really quiet, expect there's still this sound you can't hear.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
Well, right now I'm not dead. But when I am, it's like...I don't know, I guess it's like being inside a book that nobody's reading. [...] An old one. It's up on a library shelf, so you're safe and everything, but the book hasn't been checked out for a long, long time. All you can do is wait. Just hope somebody'll pick it up and start reading.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
Certain blood was being shed for uncertain reasons.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
But in a story I can steal her soul.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
We all leave one another. We die, we change - it's mostly change - we outgrow our best friends; but even if I do leave you, I will have passed on to you something of myself; you will be a different person because of knowing me; it's inescapable...
β
β
Edna O'Brien (Girl with Green Eyes (The Country Girls Trilogy, #2))
β
Hell goes round and round. In shape it is circular, and by nature it is interminable, repetitive, and nearly unbearable.
β
β
Flann O'Brien (The Third Policeman)
β
you find yourself studying the fine colors on the river, you feel wonder and awe at the setting of the sun, and you are filled with a hard, aching love for how the world could be and always should be, but now is not.
β
β
Tim O'Brien
β
She said the reason that love is so painful is that it always amounts to two people wanting more than two people can give.
β
β
Edna O'Brien (Saints and Sinners: Stories)
β
The light of the Christmas star to you. The warmth of home and hearth to you. The cheer and goodwill of friends to you. The hope of a child-like heart to you. The joy of a thousand angels to you. The love of the Son and God's peace to you.
β
β
Sherryl Woods (An O'Brien Family Christmas (Chesapeake Shores, #8))
β
They carried all the emotional baggage of men who might die. Grief, terror, love, longing--these were intangibles, but the intangibles had their own mass and specific gravity, they had tangible weight. They carried shameful memories. They carried the common secret of cowardice.... Men killed, and died, because they were embarrassed not to.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
You don't know. When I'm out there at night I feel close to my own body, I can feel my blood moving, my skin and fingernails, everything, it's like I'm full of electricity and I'm glowing in the dark - I'm on fire almost - I'm burning away into nothing - but it doesn't matter because I know exactly who I am.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
The world shrieks and sinks talons into our hearts. This we call memory.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (Tomcat in Love)
β
It isn't always easy between us. I admit that. But it's right between us, always.
β
β
Caragh M. O'Brien (Prized (Birthmarked, #2))
β
A good piece of fiction, in my view, does not offer solutions. Good stories deal with our moral struggles, our uncertainties, our dreams, our blunders, our contradictions, our endless quest for understanding. Good stories do not resolve the mysteries of the human spirit but rather describe and expand up on those mysteries.
β
β
Tim O'Brien
β
You are not your virginity. You are a human being. The state of your hymen has nothing to do with your worth.
β
β
A.S. King (Glory O'Brien's History of the Future)
β
Words, too, have genuine substance -- mass and weight and specific gravity.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (Tomcat in Love)
β
In any war story, but especially a true one, it's difficult to separate what happened from what seemed to happen. What seems to happen becomes its own happening and has to be told that way. The angles of vision are skewed. When a booby trap explodes, you close your eyes and duck and float outside yourself. .. The pictures get jumbled, you tend to miss a lot. And then afterward, when you go to tell about it, there is always that surreal seemingness, which makes the story seem untrue, but which in fact represents the hard and exact truth as it seemed.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
He had an opinion of himself, I think, that was too high for his own good. Or maybe it was the reverse. Maybe it was a low opinion that he kept trying to erase.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
Itβs a hard thing to explain to somebody who hasnβt felt it, but the presence of death and danger has a way of bringing you fully awake. It makes things vivid. When youβre afraid, really afraid, you see things you never saw before, you pay attention to the world. You make close friends. You become part of a tribe and you share the same blood- you give it together, you take it together.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
Even then, at nine years old, I wanted to live inside her body. I wanted to melt into her bones - THAT kind of love.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
Strange enlightenments are vouchsafed to those who seek the higher places.
β
β
Flann O'Brien (The Third Policeman)
β
A lot like yesterday, a lot like never.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
I'm skimming across the surface of my own history, moving fast, riding the melt beneath the blades, doing loops and spins, and when I take a high leap into the dark and come down thirty years later, I realize it is as Tim trying to save Timmy's life with a story.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
Descartes spent far too much time in bed subject to the persistent hallucination that he was thinking. You are not free from a similar disorder.
β
β
Flann O'Brien (The Dalkey Archive)
β
In war you lose your sense of the definite, hence your sense of truth itself, and therefore it's safe to say that in a war story nothing is ever absolutely true.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
And crawling on the planet's face,
some insects called the human race.
Lost in time, and lost in space.
And meaning.
β
β
Richard O'Brien (The Rocky Horror Show (Vocal Selections))
β
We are all made from star dust and we will all return to star dust, like a cosmic palindrome.
β
β
A.S. King (Glory O'Brien's History of the Future)
β
Solitude is the natural dwelling place of truthβ¦It is there you will wrestle. It is there you will be tested by fire and by darkness.
β
β
Michael D. O'Brien
β
Linda was nine then, as I was, but we were in love...it had all the shadings and complexities of mature adult love and maybe more, because there were not yet words for it, and because it was not yet fixed to comparisons or chronologies or the ways by which adults measure such things...I just loved her. Even then, at nine years old, I wanted to live inside her body. I wanted to melt into her bones -- that kind of love.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
We are fascinated, all of us, by the implacable otherness of others. And we wish to penetrate by hypothesis, by daydream, by scientific investigation those leaden walls that encase the human spirit, that define it and guard it and hold it forever inaccessible.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (In the Lake of the Woods)
β
What would you do?
Would you jump? Would you feel pity for yourself? Would you think about your family and your childhood and your dreams and all you're leaving behind? Would it hurt? Would it feel like dying? Would you cry, as I did?
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
For Rat Kiley, I think, facts were formed by sensation, not the other way around, and when you listened to one of his stories, you'd find yourself performing rapid calculations in your head, subtracting superlatives, figuring the square root of an absolute and then multiplying by maybe.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
The gross and net result of it is that people who spent most of their natural lives riding iron bicycles over the rocky roadsteads of this parish get their personalities mixed up with the personalities of their bicycle as a result of the interchanging of the atoms of each of them and you would be surprised at the number of people in these parts who are nearly half people and half bicycles...when a man lets things go so far that he is more than half a bicycle, you will not see him so much because he spends a lot of his time leaning with one elbow on walls or standing propped by one foot at kerbstones.
β
β
Flann O'Brien (The Third Policeman)
β
You can tell a true war story by the questions you ask. Somebody tells a story, let's say, and afterward you ask, 'Is it true?' and if the answer matters, you've got your answer . . . Absolute occurrence is irrelevant. A thing may happen and be a total lie; another thing may not happen and be truer than the truth.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
When a man died, there had to be blame. Jimmy Cross understood this. You could blame the war, You could blame the idiots who made the war. You could blame Kiowa for going to it. You could blame the rain. You could blame the river. You could blame the field, the mud, the climate. You could blame the enemy. You could blame the mortar rounds. You could blame people who were too lazy to read a newspaper, who were bored by the daily body counts, who switched channels at the mention of politics. You could blame whole nations. You could blame God. You could blame the munitions makers or Karl Marx or a trick of fate of an old man in Omaha who forgot to vote.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
You mean that because I have no name I cannot die and that you cannot be held answerable for death even if you kill me?"
"That is about the size of it," said the Sergeant.
I felt so sad and so entirely disappointed that tears came into my eyes and a lump of incommunicable poignancy swelled tragically in my throat. I began to feel intensely every fragment of my equal humanity. The life that was bubbling at the end of my fingers was real and nearly painful in intensity and so was the beauty of my warm face and the loose humanity of my limbs and the racy health of my red rich blood. To leave it all without good reason and to smash the little empire into small fragments was a thing too pitiful even to refuse to think about.
β
β
Flann O'Brien (The Third Policeman)
β
When a man sleeps, he is steeped and lost in a limp toneless happiness: awake he is restless, tortured by his body and the illusion of existence. Why have men spent the centuries seeking to overcome the awakened body? Put it to sleep, that is a better way. Let it serve only to turn the sleeping soul over, to change the blood-stream and thus make possible a deeper and more refined sleep.
β
β
Flann O'Brien (At Swim-Two-Birds)
β
Forty-three years old, and the war occurred half a lifetime ago, and yet the remembering makes it now. And sometimes remembering will lead to a story, which makes it forever. Thatβs what stories are for. Stories are for joining the past to the future. Stories are for those late hours in the night when you canβt remember how you got from where you were to where you are. Stories are for eternity, when memory is erased, when there is nothing to remember except the story.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
All of us, I suppose, like to believe that in a moral emergency we will behave like the heroes of our youth, bravely and forthrightly, without thought of personal loss or discredit. Certainly that was my conviction back in the summer of 1968. Tim O'Brien: a secret hero. The Lone Ranger. If the stakes ever became high enoughβif the evil were evil enough, if the good were good enoughβI would simply tap a secret reservoir of courage that had been accumulating inside me over the years. Courage, I seemed to think, comes to us in finite quantities, like an inheritance, and by being frugal and stashing it away and letting it earn interest, we steadily increase our moral capital in preparation for that day when the account must be drawn down. It was a comforting theory. It dispensed with all those bothersome little acts of daily courage; it offered hope and grace to the repetitive coward; it justified the past while amortizing the future.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
I am tortured too. I am tortured by belly fat and magazine covers about how to please everyone but myself. I am tortured by sheep who click on anything that will guarantee a ten-pound loss in one week. Sheep who will get on their knees if it means someone will like them more. I am tortured by my inability to want to hang out with desperate sheep. I am tortured by goddamned yearbooks full of bullshit. I met you when. Iβll miss the times. Iβll keep in touch. Best friends forever. Is this okay? Are you all right? Are you tortured too?
β
β
A.S. King (Glory O Brien's History of the Future)
β
To generalize about war is like generalizing about peace. Almost everything is true. Almost nothing is true. At its core, perhaps, war is just another name for death, and yet any soldier will tell you, if he tells the truth, that proximity to death brings with it a corresponding proximity to life. After a firefight, there is always the immense pleasure of aliveness. The trees are alive. The grass, the soilβeverything. All around you things are purely living, and you among them, and the aliveness makes you tremble. You feel an intense, out-of-the-skin awareness of your living selfβyour truest self, the human being you want to be and then become by the force of wanting it. In the midst of evil you want to be a good man. You want decency. You want justice and courtesy and human concord, things you never knew you wanted. There is a kind of largeness to it, a kind of godliness. Though itβs odd, youβre never more alive than when youβre almost dead. You recognize whatβs valuable. Freshly, as if for the first time, you love whatβs best in yourself and in the world, all that might be lost. At the hour of dusk you sit at your foxhole and look out on a wide river turning pinkish red, and at the mountains beyond, and although in the morning you must cross the river and go into the mountains and do terrible things and maybe die, even so, you find yourself studying the fine colors on the river, you feel wonder and awe at the setting of the sun, and you are filled with a hard, aching love for how the world could be and always should be, but now is not.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)
β
Would you have this?β the Protectorat hissed at his son.
Rafael's gaze narrowed in a slow inspection while she stared defiantly back. Rafael's gaze faltered, shot briefly toward Leon, and then down. His answer was obvious: no.
And in spite of everything, in the face of all the other more important dangers that threatened her, it still stung that someone, some boy, found her ugly. Gaia burned with sudden hate for all of them.
The Protectorat saw. He smiled slightly.
βI thought not,β said the Protectorat, releasing her with a flick. He turned back toward his family. βI can't thrust her on any family I know, no matter what her genes are. She's a freak, not a hero. I'd rather make a hero out of Myrna Silk.β
Leon had been standing tensely throughout this exchange. βI'd take Gaia,β Leon said, his low voice resonating in the space.
β
β
Caragh M. O'Brien (Birthmarked (Birthmarked, #1))
β
But the thing about remembering is that you don't forget. You take your material where you find it, which is in your life, at the intersection of past and present. The memory-traffic feeds into a rotary up on your head, where it goes in circles for a while, then pretty soon imagination flows in and the traffic merges and shoots off down a thousand different streets. As a writer, all you can do is pick a street and go for the ride, putting things down as they come at you. That's the real obsession. All those stories.
β
β
Tim O'Brien (The Things They Carried)