Watt Novel Quotes

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I wasn’t seeking a place, but a person. I’d come home.
Erin Watt (Cracked Kingdom (The Royals, #5))
Our willingness to write truthfully brings the story to life.
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel: Unlock the story within)
There is a ruthlessness to the creative act. It often involves a betrayal of the status quo.
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel: Unlock the story within)
Our job as writers is to be as curious as a child, to see things for the first time, and to never assume. We must always be willing to surrender our idea of the story to allow the larger story to emerge. We are seeking to understand the nature of things, the underlying forces at work.
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel: Unlock the story within)
I don't understand how meat like you survived to adulthood.
Peter Watts (Blindsight (Firefall, #1))
Yet the Narrator’s quest is not only for his own identity and vocation. He seeks an understanding of art, sexuality and worldly and political affairs: he is a snoop and a voyeur; he comments and classifies; his taxonomic impulse makes the novel appear to be a vast compendium, replete with burrowing wasps and bedsteads, military strategies, stereoscopes, asparagus and aeroplanes.
Adam A. Watt (The Cambridge Introduction to Marcel Proust)
There can be great value in imagining our hero at the end of the story. When we have confidence in our destination we are more inclined to put our hero in jeopardy.
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel: Unlock the story within)
We tend to worry that we can’t do it, that we will fail, that we are not educated enough, or talented enough, when the truth is that we are just scared.
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel: Unlock the story within)
You ever try holding, say, even a single chapter of a novel in your head? Consciously? All at once?
Peter Watts (Echopraxia (Firefall, #2))
Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.” —ALBERT EINSTEIN
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel: Unlock the story within)
Everybody loves to play this game — the game of hide-and-seek, the game of scaring oneself with uncertainty. It is human. It is why we go to the theater or movies and why we read novels. And our so-called real life, seen from the position of the mystic, is a version of the same thing. The mystic is the person who has realized that the game is a game. It is hide-and-seek, and everything associated with the “hide” side of it is connected to those places within us where we as individuals feel lonely, impotent, put down, and so on — the negative side of existence.
Alan W. Watts (Eastern Wisdom, Modern Life)
It might be useful here to say a word about Beckett, as a link between the two stages, and as illustrating the shift towards schism. He wrote for transition, an apocalyptic magazine (renovation out of decadence, a Joachite indication in the title), and has often shown a flair for apocalyptic variations, the funniest of which is the frustrated millennialism of the Lynch family in Watt, and the most telling, perhaps, the conclusion of Comment c'est. He is the perverse theologian of a world which has suffered a Fall, experienced an Incarnation which changes all relations of past, present, and future, but which will not be redeemed. Time is an endless transition from one condition of misery to another, 'a passion without form or stations,' to be ended by no parousia. It is a world crying out for forms and stations, and for apocalypse; all it gets is vain temporality, mad, multiform antithetical influx. It would be wrong to think that the negatives of Beckett are a denial of the paradigm in favour of reality in all its poverty. In Proust, whom Beckett so admires, the order, the forms of the passion, all derive from the last book; they are positive. In Beckett, the signs of order and form are more or less continuously presented, but always with a sign of cancellation; they are resources not to be believed in, cheques which will bounce. Order, the Christian paradigm, he suggests, is no longer usable except as an irony; that is why the Rooneys collapse in laughter when they read on the Wayside Pulpit that the Lord will uphold all that fall. But of course it is this order, however ironized, this continuously transmitted idea of order, that makes Beckett's point, and provides his books with the structural and linguistic features which enable us to make sense of them. In his progress he has presumed upon our familiarity with his habits of language and structure to make the relation between the occulted forms and the narrative surface more and more tenuous; in Comment c'est he mimes a virtually schismatic breakdown of this relation, and of his language. This is perfectly possible to reach a point along this line where nothing whatever is communicated, but of course Beckett has not reached it by a long way; and whatever preserves intelligibility is what prevents schism. This is, I think, a point to be remembered whenever one considers extremely novel, avant-garde writing. Schism is meaningless without reference to some prior condition; the absolutely New is simply unintelligible, even as novelty. It may, of course, be asked: unintelligible to whom? --the inference being that a minority public, perhaps very small--members of a circle in a square world--do understand the terms in which the new thing speaks. And certainly the minority public is a recognized feature of modern literature, and certainly conditions are such that there may be many small minorities instead of one large one; and certainly this is in itself schismatic. The history of European literature, from the time the imagination's Latin first made an accommodation with the lingua franca, is in part the history of the education of a public--cultivated but not necessarily learned, as Auerbach says, made up of what he calls la cour et la ville. That this public should break up into specialized schools, and their language grow scholastic, would only be surprising if one thought that the existence of excellent mechanical means of communication implied excellent communications, and we know it does not, McLuhan's 'the medium is the message' notwithstanding. But it is still true that novelty of itself implies the existence of what is not novel, a past. The smaller the circle, and the more ambitious its schemes of renovation, the less useful, on the whole, its past will be. And the shorter. I will return to these points in a moment.
Frank Kermode (The Sense of an Ending: Studies in the Theory of Fiction)
Who in the Hell is Tom Jones?" I was shacked with a 24 year old girl from New York City for two weeks- about the time of the garbage strike out there, and one night my 34 year old woman arrived and she said, "I want to see my rival." she did and then she said, "o, you're a cute little thing!" next I knew there was a screech of wildcats- such screaming and scratch- ing, wounded animal moans, blood and piss. . . I was drunk and in my shorts. I tried to seperate them and fell, wrenched my knee. then they were through the screen door and down the walk and out into the street. squadcars full of cops arrived. a police heli- coptor circled overhead. I stood in the bathroom and grinned in the mirror. it's not often at the age of 55 that such splendid things occur. better than the Watts riots. the 34 year old came back in. she had pissed all over her- self and her clothing was torn and she was followed by 2 cops who wanted to know why. pulling up my shorts I tried to explain. Charles Bukowski, Ham on Rye: A Novel. (Ecco; Reprint edition July 29, 2014) Originally published 1982.
Charles Bukowski (Ham on Rye)
Timothy Leary was not so wide of the mark when he said that we must go out of our minds (abstract values) to come to our senses (concrete values). For coming to our senses must, above all, be the experience of our own existence as living organisms rather than “personalities,” like characters in a play or a novel acting out some artificial plot in which the persons are simply masks for a conflict of abstract ideas or principles. Man as an organism is to the world outside like a whirlpool is to a river: man and world are a single natural process, but we are behaving as if we were invaders and plunderers in a foreign territory. For when the individual is defined and felt as the separate personality or ego, he remains unaware that his actual body is a dancing pattern of energy that simply does not happen by itself. It happens only in concert with myriads of other patterns—called animals, plants, insects, bacteria, minerals, liquids, and gases. The definition of a person and the normal feeling of “I” do not effectively include these relationships. You say, “I came into this world.” You didn’t; you came out of it, as a branch from a tree. So
Alan W. Watts (Does It Matter? Essays on Man's Relation to Materiality)
The worst enemy to creativity is self-doubt.” —SYLVIA PLATH
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel: Unlock the story within)
Many of Jane Austen's admirers, it is true, read her novels as a means of escape into a cozy sort of Old English nirvana, but they find this escape in her pages only because, as E. M. Foster has written, the devout "Janeite" 'like all regular churchgoers ... scarcely notices what is being said.' - Ian Watt- On Sense and Sensibility
Susannah Carson (A Truth Universally Acknowledged: 33 Great Writers on Why We Read Jane Austen)
What was a marathon if not thousands of footsteps, one after the other? What was a novel if it wasn’t just a bunch of words placed in succession? Set just one foot or one word down, and you would have made progress, and nobody could tell you otherwise. Don’t think too far ahead, only on what you need to do at that very moment.
Tom Watts (The Initiate Artificer (Small Town Crafter #3))
Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world." — Albert Einstein
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel: Unlock the story within)
Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel: Unlock the story within)
WRITING EXERCISES FOR TODAY: Write for five minutes, beginning with: 1) “My story is about…” 2) “What I want to express through this story is…” As your hero, write for five minutes, beginning with: 3) “If I were to describe myself, I would say that I am…” 4) “The most incredible thing I ever did was…” 5) “The turning point in my life was when…” 6) “Everything will make sense when…
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel: Unlock the story within)
Take no care for your dignity.
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel: Unlock the story within)
Maybe becoming a latter-day Watt or Faraday or even Engelbart was trickier than we’d thought. Also, we had to contend with real life, a field that wasn’t our strength. Everything started to crumble when the most productive comrade, Nikhil, got himself a serious girlfriend, immediately nicknamed Yoko, who refused to visit our house and got Nikhil to move in with her and focus on his doctorate. He’s a professor at Stanford now, which is great; our paths never cross, which is fine. After Nikhil quit, we three remainers soldiered on for over a year, during which things went, in accordance with a law of gravity we didn’t understand, downhill.
Joseph O'Neill (Godwin: A Novel)
লেখালেখি অনেক টা ফার্নিচার তৈরির মতো, একটা আসাব তৈরির জন্য অনেক নিয়ম আছে, অনেক কিছু জানার আছেম যেটা সবাই জানেনা বা পারে না। যেমন আমি অনেক চেয়ারে বসেছি বলেই আমি একটা চেয়ার বানাতে পাড়ব না, ঠিক তেমনই অনেক বই পড়েছি বলেই আমি তেমন একটা বই লিখে ফেলতে পাড়ব না
Nigel Watts (Write a Novel, 2nd Edition: A Teach Yourself Guide (Teach Yourself: Writing))
At the end of the book. Sir Peter and Lou return to England where he plans to build a laboratory and continue his researches and experiments on airplane motors. They have no more desire for heroin, but, typical of Crowley’s attitudes, they continue to use cocaine occasionally in a religious-erotic context. John Bull and other tabloids denounced this novel as an attempt to seduce England into irresponsible drug abuse, and implied that Crowley was paid for this dirty work by the German High Command. (Actually, the first oath required of candidates for the Ordo Templi Orientis, Crowley’s “magick” freemasonic society, was “I will never allow myself to be mastered by any force or any person,” and it was explicitly stated to the novice that this oath included drink and drugs.) Crowley’s idea, however, lives on. Responsible use of drugs in a religious setting, as an alternative to prohibitive laws that are violated widely, is still urged by persons as diverse as poet Robert Graves, philosopher Alan Watts, Dr. John Lilly, Dr. Humphry Osmond, Dr. Huston Smith, novelist Ken Kesey, and many others; and the conservatives still reply that to adopt such a policy will lead to reckless abuse and chaos. They seem not to have observed that the prohibitive laws they support have already produced precisely those results along with more crime, more violence, and more police corruption.
Robert Anton Wilson (Sex, Drugs & Magick – A Journey Beyond Limits)
As we imagine the world of our story, we are putting our characters into situations that may cause us to question old beliefs. Through this process we are often forcing ourselves to explore the nature of dynamics we may have otherwise overlooked. This can be exhilarating, but also very tiring. We must be gentle with ourselves as we plow forward, and we must be conscious of this phenomenon lest we make meaning out of it. Fatigue, self-doubt, confusion: these are not indications that our project should be abandoned. We must keep exploring. The exhaustion is temporary.
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel)
I can ask myself where this particular fear lives in the world of my story. The fear is there for a reason. When we begin to work with our doubts and fears, we grow as storytellers, recognizing that our circumstances are not overcome through force of will but by acceptance.
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel: Unlock the story within)
We can’t solve our hero’s problem in our heads. We just need to imagine him transformed at the end of the story. As we imagine, we are provided with all sorts of ideas and images that precede the ending.
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel: Unlock the story within)
Brin had blurbed my novel Starfish; to say I was favorably disposed towards the man would be an understatement. And yet I found myself increasingly skeptical as he spoke out in favor of ubiquitous surveillance: the “Transparent Society,” he called it, and It Was Good. The camera would point both ways, cops and politicians just as subject to our scrutiny as we were to theirs. People are primates, Brin reminded us; our leaders are Alphas. Trying to ban government surveillance would be like poking a silverback gorilla with a stick. “But just maybe,” he allowed, “they’ll let us look back.” Dude, thought I, do you have the first fucking clue how silverbacks react to eye contact?
Peter Watts (Peter Watts Is An Angry Sentient Tumor: Revenge Fantasies and Essays)
Continue to ask, “Why am I making this choice?” If an answer doesn’t reveal itself to you, trust your gut. There is much we are not supposed to know until after we’ve written the first draft.
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel: Unlock the story within)
You saw the race riots in Watts. . . . Do nice people go around burning and looting — and even killing? Not since last night. When our Marines razed a village outside Khe Sanh in North Vietnam.
William C. Anderson (The Apoplectic Palm Tree; or, The happy happening among blacks and whites at the Greater Mount Moriah Solid Rock True Happiness Baptist Church and Funeral Parlor, a novel)
Creativity is not an occupation; it is our birthright.
Alan Watt (The 90-Day Novel)