You have never seen such animals as these who without a sound or a sign carry you off. You race with them across the long familiar ground that in that moment seems so glorious, so charged with beauty, strange. In their jaws you are carried so effortlessly, with such great care that you think it will never end, you long for it not to end, and then you wake and know that, indeed, they have not brought you back.
Joy WilliamsGood writing never soothes or comforts. It is no prescription, neither is it diversionary, although it can and should enchant while it explodes in the reader's face.
Joy WilliamsWriters are like eremites or anchorites - natural-born eremites or anchorites - who seem puzzled as to why they went up the pole or into the cave in the first place.
Joy WilliamsWriters when they're writing live in a spooky, clamorous silence, a state somewhat like the advanced stages of prayer but without prayer's calming benefits.
Joy WilliamsThere is a certain type of conversation one hears only when one is drunk and it is like a dream, full of humor and threat and significance, deep significance.
Joy WilliamsWriters end up writing stories-or rather, stories' shadows-and they're grateful if they can, but it is not enough. Nothing the writer can do is ever enough
Joy WilliamsA writer starts out, I think, wanting to be a transfiguring agent, and ends up usually just making contact, contact with other human beings. This, unsurprisingly, is not enough.
Joy WilliamsIt's become fashionable these days to say that the writer writes because he is not whole, he has a wound, he writes to heal it, but who cares if the writer is not whole; of course the writer is not whole, or even particularly well.
Joy WilliamsThe writer trusts nothing she writes-it should be too reckless and alive for that, it should be beautiful and menacing and slightly out of control. . . . Good writing . . . explodes in the reader's face. Whenever the writer writes, it's always three or four or five o'clock in the morning in her head.
Joy WilliamsFor centuries poets, some poets, have tried to give a voice to the animals, and readers, some readers, have felt empathy and sorrow. If animals did have voices, and they could speak with the tongues of angels-at the very least with the tongues of angels-they would be unable to save themselves from us. What good would language do? Their mysterious otherness has not saved them, nor have their beautiful songs and coats and skins and shells and eyes.
Joy WilliamsI think I had the same notion most people have, which is itโs simply a town that percolates around country music. Though country-music history is deep and richly steeped throughout the city, this is a place thatโs been expanding musically and culturallyโฆPeople coming from Europe and Canada-there are all kinds of different cultures and different music being represented here. It continues to blossom.
Joy WilliamsYou don't believe in Nature anymore. It's too isolated from you. You've abstracted it. It's so messy and damaged and sad. Your eyes glaze as you travel life's highway past all the crushed animals and the Big Gulp cups.
Joy WilliamsA side benefit of the new and developing technologies is that soon we won't have to feel guilty about the suffering and denigration of the animals because we will have made them up.
Joy WilliamsThe writer doesnโt write for the reader. He doesnโt write for himself, either. He writes to serveโฆsomething. Somethingness. The somethingness that is sheltered by the wings of nothingness โ those exquisite, enveloping, protecting wings.
Joy WilliamsWhy does the writer write? The writer writes to serve--hopeless ly he writes in the hope that he might serve--not himself and not others, but that great cold elemental grace that knows us.
Joy WilliamsWhat a story is, is devious. It pretends transparency, forthrightness. It engages with ordinary people, ordinary matters, recognizable stuff. But this is all a masquerade. What good stories deal with is the horror and incomprehensibility of time, the dark encroachment of old catastrophes...
Joy WilliamsThe story knows itself better than the writer does at some point, knows what's being said before the writer figures out how to say it.
Joy WilliamsOne is always enthralled, I think, when a young writer you're just beginning to read and comprehend dies.
Joy WilliamsI think the writer has to be responsible to signs and dreams. If you don't do anything with it, you lose it.
Joy WilliamsBut who knows what good might come from the least of us? From the bones of old horses is made the most beautiful Prussian Blue.
Joy Williams