"Donkeys are the most misunderstood and abused animals around the world."
"I mostly write about the working poor. Somehow, they're not being written about much anymore. I'm very interested in people who are in a situation that needs a little puzzling out. The thing that gets me started on a story is a person in a tough situation."
Source: Source: therumpus.net
About the author
Bonnie Jo Campbell
Author, Musician
Bonnie Jo Campbell is an acclaimed American author known for her vivid portrayals of rural life and the complexities of human resilience, particularly in her novel 'Once Upon a River.'
All quotes by Bonnie Jo Campbell →Same author
More quotes by Bonnie Jo Campbell
"I think by writing about a place with great specificity, you manage to make it universal."
"We have a shotgun we inherited from my father-in-law, a paranoid Englishman living in Texas. I have a .22 Marlin rifle, similar to the one Annie Oakley had, and my husband has a .357 Magnum pistol. All those are locked up tight, of course. We have a couple of pellet guns that get more use than the real guns."
"I worked probably fewer jobs than most people, or fewer real soul-killing jobs than other people. I've been a typist, a typesetter, a keyliner, cappuccino-maker. I think I've been pretty lucky."
"My donkeys are Jack and Don Quixote. They're very smart, very cautious. Much of what people consider stubbornness in donkeys is actually cautiousness."
"We know that we need to explore desire in fiction - many say that the only way a story exists is that a character feels a strong desire - and nature is the place where creatures act on their desires in the most pure way imaginable, so maybe nature also works as a metaphor for whatever emotional troubles my characters have to negotiate. I'm interested in my characters as survivors, and maybe that works best when the old-fashioned notion of humans surviving in wilderness is not too far away."