148 Quotes by Nicholson Baker

  • Author Nicholson Baker
  • Quote

    There's something paralyzing about being a writer that you have to escape. I don't want to think of myself as a guy who's written a bunch of books. The 26 letters distance us from our own hesitations and they make us sound as if we know what we're doing. We know grammar, we know prose, but actually we're all just struggling in the dark, really.

  • Tags
  • Share


  • Author Nicholson Baker
  • Quote

    Most writers are secretly worried that they're not really writers. That it's all been happenstance, something came together randomly, the letters came together, and they won't coalesce ever again.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Nicholson Baker
  • Quote

    Most good novelists have been women or homosexuals. The novel is the triumphant evolved creation, one increasingly has to think, of these two groups, who have cooperated more closely in this domain than in any other.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Nicholson Baker
  • Quote

    Gandhi was such an important figure to the pacifists of the '30s, and he was such an extraordinary embodiment of nonviolence, that I thought it was necessary to have him in there. When he would say something about the war, it was to some extent news - and he was sure to have a response that was different from that of other world leaders.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Nicholson Baker
  • Quote

    Updike was the first to take the penile sensorium under the wing of elaborate metaphorical prose.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Nicholson Baker
  • Quote

    When the excessively shy force themselves to be forward, they are frequently surprisingly unsubtle and overdirect and even rude: they have entered an extreme region beyond their normal personality, an area of social crime where gradations don't count; unavailable to them are the instincts and taboos that booming extroverts, who know the territory of self-advancement far better, can rely on.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Nicholson Baker
  • Quote

    I wanted my first novel to be a veritable infarct of narrative cloggers-the trick being to feel your way through each clog by blowing it up until its obstructiveness finally reveals not blank mass but unlooked-for seepage points of passage.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Nicholson Baker
  • Quote

    Gandhi was important for another reason as well: his country was suffering under the British Empire, and yet he was leading a very singular kind of resistance to it. At the time he was speaking about the violence in Europe, his followers were in jail as prisoners of the British government.

  • Tags
  • Share