"Porches are America's lost rooms."
"There is something worse than dying, and that is humiliation - at least so it seemed to me."
Source: Barbara Grizzuti Harrison (1989). “Italian Days”, p.213, Atlantic Monthly Press
About the author
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
Author
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison was an influential writer known for her exploration of love and identity, particularly in her notable work 'The Woman Who Knew Too Much.'
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"The most painful moral struggles are not those between good and evil, but between the good and the lesser good."
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"Fantasies are more than substitutes for unpleasant reality; they are also dress rehearsals, plans. All acts performed in the world begin in the imagination."
"Our awesome responsibility to ourselves, to our children, and to the future is to create ourselves in the image of goodness, because the future depends on the nobility of our imaginings."
"Kindness and intelligence don't always deliver us from the pitfalls and traps: there are always failures of love, of will, of imagination. There is no way to take the danger out of human relationships."