350 Quotes by Alice Munro

  • Author Alice Munro
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    When I told him on the phone that after all you and I would not be getting married, he said "Oh-oh. Do you think you'll ever manage to get another one?" If I'd objected to his saying that he would naturally have said it was a joke. And it was a joke. I have not managed to get another one but perhaps have not been in the best condition to try.

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  • Author Alice Munro
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    One drop of hatred in your soul will spread and discolor everything like a drop of black ink in white milk.

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  • Author Alice Munro
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    Country manners. Even if somebody phones up to tell you your house is burning down, they ask first how you are.

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  • Author Alice Munro
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    I would ... go up to the mailbox and sit in the grass, waiting. ... Till it came to me one day there were women doing this with their lives, all over. There were women just waiting and waiting by mailboxes for one letter or another. I imagined me making this journey day after day and year after year, and my hair starting to go gray, and I thought, I was never made to go on like that. ... If there were woman all through life waiting, and women busy and not waiting, I knew which I had to be.

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  • Author Alice Munro
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    It's as if tendencies that seem most deeply rooted in our minds, most private and singular, have come in as spores on the prevailing wind, looking for any likely place to land, any welcome.

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  • Author Alice Munro
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    Luck took me right out of myself - I read it in one gulp, and it never let me down. Sharp and surprising but always responsible, no tricks for tricks' sake; so satisfying, with its shifting and puzzles. So much fiction turns out to be diversion, in spite of fancy claims, and doesn't really look at anything. Well - this does.

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  • Author Alice Munro
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    But I never cleaned thoroughly enough, my reorganization proved to be haphazard, the disgraces came unfailingly to light, and it was clear how we failed, how disastrously we fell short of that ideal of order and cleanliness, household decency which I as much as anybody else believed in.

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  • Author Alice Munro
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    I knew I would be famous one day. That's because I lived in a very small town and nobody liked doing the same things I did, like writing.

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