"Misanthropes have some admirable if paradoxical virtues. It is no exaggeration to say that we are among the nicest people you are likely to meet. Because good manners build sturdy walls, our distaste for intimacy makes us exceedingly cordial "ships that pass in the night." As long as you remain a stranger we will be your friend forever."
Florence King
Author
Florence King was a Southern author and essayist known for her sharp wit and critical examination of Southern culture, particularly in her work 'Confessions of a Failed Southern Lady.'
- Born
- January 1, 1936
- Died
- January 15, 2018
- Quotes
- 114
- Rank
- #2665
About Florence King
Florence King — Life and Legacy
Florence King was a notable Southern author and essayist, celebrated for her incisive wit and keen observations on society. Her work, particularly 'Confessions of a Failed Southern Lady,' offers a candid exploration of Southern life, challenging conventional norms and celebrating individuality. King's writing reflects her belief that humor can expose the absurdities of social expectations, as seen in her quote, 'A writer is a person who can make a living by being a nuisance.' This perspective illustrates her view that literature should provoke thought and challenge the status quo. By emphasizing individualism, she encouraged readers to embrace their uniqueness and resist conformity, making her insights resonate with those seeking authenticity in a world of social pressures. King's legacy endures as her quotes continue to inspire discussions about identity and the complexities of human nature.
Quote collection
Florence King quotes (page 1 of 6)
114 quotes — follow a thought to its full quote page.
"Any hope that America would finally grow up vanished with the rise of fundamentalist Christianity. Fundamentalism, with its born-again regression, its pink-and-gold concept of heaven, its literal-mindedness, its rambunctious good cheer... its anti-intellectualism... its puerile hymns... and its faith-healing... are made to order for King Kid America."
"In its purest sense, nicknaming is an elitist ritual practiced by those who cherish hierarchy. For preppies it's a smoke signal that allows Bunny to tell Pooky that they belong to the same tribe, while among the good old boys it serves the cause of masculine dominance by identifying Bear and Wrecker as Alpha males."
"America is not a democracy, it's an absolute monarchy ruled by King Kid. In a nation of immigrants, the child is automatically more of an American than his parents. Americans regard children as what Mr. Hudson in Upstairs, Downstairs called betters. Aping their betters, American adults do their best to turn themselves into children. Puerility exercises droit de seigneur everywhere."
"A home without a grandmother is like an egg without salt."
"The American way of stress is comparable to Freud's 'beloved symptom', his name for the cherished neurosis that a patient cultivates like the rarest of orchids and does not want to be cured of. Stress makes Americans feel busy, important, and in demand, and simultaneously deprived, ignored, and victimized. Stress makes them feel interesting and complex instead of boring and simple, and carries an assumption of sensitivity not unlike the Old World assumption that aristocrats were high-strung. In short, stress has become a status symbol."
"If you ever meet someone who cannot understand why solitary confinement is considered punishment, you have met a misanthrope."
"A woman must wait for her ovaries to die before she can get her rightful personality back. Post-menstrual is the same as pre-menstrual; I am once again what I was before the age of twelve: a female human being who knows that a month has thirty day, not twenty-five, and who can spend every one of them free of the shackles of that defect of body and mind known as femininity."
"I simply like guns because you can't shoot people without them."
"I wasn't used to children and they were getting on my nerves. Worse, it appeared that I was a child, too. I hadn't known that before; I thought I was just short."
"Writers who have nothing to say always strain for metaphors to say it in."
"If we define a misanthrope as 'someone who does not suffer fools and likes to see fools suffer,' we have described a person with something to look forward to."
""Very" is the most useless word in the English language and can always come out. More than useless, it is treacherous because it invariably weakens what it is intended to strengthen. For example, would you rather hear the mincing shallowness of "I love you very much" or the heart-slamming intensity of "I love you"?"
"The more immoral we become in big ways, the more puritanical we become in little ways."
"Affirmative action was designed originally for "women and other minorities" but the phrase has become just another tortured euphemism. Female conscientiousness and eagerness to please have always made women good students and natural test takers. Jews have gloried in scholarship throughout the ages, and Asians of both sexes score so high on SATs and IQ tests that they regard affirmative action as an impediment. Affirmative action really means favoritism for blacks for the sake of racial peace, but the favor is pure chimera, and so, increasingly, is the peace."
"My object is to live in a place that does not call itself 'the community with a heart.' I want one of those godforsaken towns where all the young people leave and the rest sit on the porch with a rifle across their knees."
"People are so busy dreaming the American Dream, fantasizing about what they could be or have a right to be, that they're all asleep at the switch. Consequently we are living in the Age of Human Error."
"The proliferation of support groups suggests to me that too many Americans are growing up in homes that do not contain a grandmother. A home without a grandmother is like an egg without salt.... The emotionally satisfying discussions that take place in Chronic Pain Outreach and Depression Resources are simply updated versions of the grandmotherly practice of hanging crepe. We could eliminate much of the isolation that support groups exist to fill and save the "traditional family" that everybody is so worried about if more couples took their aging parents to live with them."
"No matter which sex I went to bed with, I never smoked on the street"
"God may have loved the common people, but a trip to any shopping mall suggests that He made far too many of them."