"Southerners ask intimate questions in the way monkeys groom each other for lice, not to pry but to make you feel cared for."
About Reynolds Price
Reynolds Price — Life and Legacy
Reynolds Price was a celebrated American author whose literary contributions deeply examined the intricacies of love and truth. His novel 'A Long and Happy Life' showcases his ability to portray the emotional depth of human relationships, often revealing the contradictions that accompany love. Price's perspective on truth is equally compelling; he believed that personal experiences shape our understanding of reality, a theme that resonates throughout his writing. For instance, he noted that 'the truth is often a matter of perspective,' emphasizing the subjective nature of our experiences. This insight challenges readers to consider how their own narratives influence their perceptions of truth. Price's work remains significant today, as it invites readers to confront their own emotional landscapes and the complexities of their relationships, fostering a deeper understanding of the human experience.
Quote collection
Reynolds Price quotes
19 quotes — follow a thought to its full quote page.
"A need to tell and hear stories is essential to the species Homo sapiens-second in necessity apparently after nourishment and before love and shelter. Millions survive without love or home, almost none in silence; the opposite of silence leads quickly to narrative, and the sound of story is the dominant sound of our lives, from the small accounts of our day's events to the vast incommunicable constructs of psychopaths."
"Strength just comes in one brand - you. Stand up at sunrise and meet what they send you and keep your hair combed"
"Stand up at sunrise and meet what they send you."
"The only thing more destructive than a tornado is a family."
"Life is short and often stingy; feast the heart with what it craves, short of cruelty, and let the world wonder."
"Many Americans would die naked in the middle of the road before they'd tell you what's hurt them most. But a born Southerner will show you the cell in their heart that burns the hardest. They'll hold it out to you in their bare right hand."
"What I still ask for daily-for life as long as I have work to do, and work as long as I have life."
"The sound of story is the dominant sound of our lives."
"Cities are the least permanent things in our civilization."
"From the age of six I wanted to be an artist. At that point I meant a painter, but it turned out what I really meant was I was someone who was very interested in watching the world and making copies of it."
"As a child I thought it was very boring when I had to sit with [my mother] on the city streets, but the time sank deep and surfaced later."
"You have to realize that your work is done by your body, and if your body is in very bad health, it's not going to work for you no matter how young you are. So, I'm a bit of an athletic coach when it comes to trying to respect my body's needs and tendencies, and when I teach students, I try and persuade them of the same."
"Even now, after whatever gains feminism has made in involving fathers in the rearing of their children, I still think virtually all of us spend the most formative years of our lives very much in the presence of women"
"The older I've got the less I find myself going back and re-reading or really reading new fiction or poetry."
"I've met little meanness, wherever I went."
"The death of every art form seems imminent at least once in every century; but while the very funeral arrangements go forward, some child is born who is Michelangelo, Picasso, Yeats."
"Writing is a fearsome but grand vocation—potentially healing but likewise deadly. I wouldn’t trade my life for the world."
"I think we Southerners have talked a fair amount of malarkey about the mystique of being Southern."