Reading is rapture (or if it isn't, I put the book down meaning to go on with it later, and escape out the side door).
William MaxwellLove, even of the most ardent and soul-destroying kind, is never caught by the lens of the camera.
William MaxwellIt was lovely when you found students who responded to things you were enthusiastic about.
William MaxwellMy younger daughter told me recently that when she was a child she thought the typewriter was a toy that I went into my room and closed the door and played with.
William MaxwellThe nail doesn't choose the time or the circumstances in which it is drawn to the magnet
William MaxwellIf I had had to write only about imaginary people, I would have had to close up my typewriter. I wrote about my life in less and less disguise as I grew older, and finally with no disguise - except the disguise we create for ourselves, which is self-deception.
William MaxwellIf you turn the imagination loose like a hunting dog, it will often return with the bird in its mouth.
William MaxwellSatin and lace and brown velvet and the faint odor of violets. That was all which was left to him of his love.
William MaxwellBecause I actively enjoy sleeping, dreams, the unexplainable dialogues that take place in my head as I am drifting off, all that, I tell myself that lying down to an afternoon nap that goes on and on through eternity is not something to be concerned about. What spoils this pleasant fancy is the recollection that when people are dead they don't read books. This I find unbearable.
William MaxwellThe view after seventy is breathtaking. What is lacking is someone, anyone, of the older generation to whom you can turn when you want to satisfy your curiosity about some detail of the landscape of the past. There is no longer any older generation. You have become it, while your mind was mostly on other matters
William MaxwellI had inadvertently walked through a door that I shouldnโt have gone through and couldnโt get back to the place I hadnโt meant to leave.
William MaxwellSometimes she goes out to work as a practical nurse, and comes home and sits by the kitchen table soaking her feet in a pan of hot water and Epsom salts. When she gets into bed and the springs creak under her weight, she groans with the pleasure of lying stretched out on an object that understands her so well.
William MaxwellWhat we, or at any rate what I, refer to confidently as memory--meaning a moment, a scene, a fact that has been subjected to a fixative and thereby rescued from oblivion--is really a form of storytelling that goes on continually in the mind and often changes with the telling. Too many conflicting emotional interests are involved for life ever to be wholly acceptable, and possibly it is the work of the storyteller to rearrange things so that they conform to this end. In any case, in talking about the past we lie with every breath we draw.
William MaxwellMy father represented authority, which meantโto meโthat he could not also represent understanding.
William Maxwell