Edith Pearlman Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy the top 11 famous quotes, sayings and quotations by Edith Pearlman.
Famous Quotes By Edith Pearlman

He gave her that last word. He gave her his love. He would think of her almost every day for the rest of his life. Only his presence would he withhold. — Edith Pearlman

I am slow. A sentence often takes an hour to compose before I throw it out. What can you do? — Edith Pearlman

What counted was how you behaved while death let you live, and how you met death when life released you. — Edith Pearlman

What a rich phrase. You could live a life on the income it yielded. — Edith Pearlman

Murder, arson, adultery, drugging and drinking, cruel politics
reading a book crammed with such activities can make the timid and yearning among us feel like the happiest people in the world. — Edith Pearlman

Later, at four in the morning, Myron encounters his eldest son, Sean, in the kitchen. They talk about schoolwork (Sean has an imminent exam), about what Sean would like to become (a physicist and a poet). "Medio tutissimus ibis," Sean's father says, and the son translates, "You will be safest in the middle." (All three boys know their Ovid.) Son and father regard each other, and Myron says, or perhaps merely thinks, the following: "My son, I remember when our family was only you and your mother and I. . . . I remember when this refrigerator was hung with your nursery drawings. I remember when you put your child's hand so gently against Leo's infant cheek, silk touching silk, I remember so much, I would keep you here until morning telling you, beloved boy, but now I must go to bed. — Edith Pearlman

Still she wondered: did the present deliver up the future, or must you chase your destiny like a harpoonist? — Edith Pearlman

They were relieved that I was chosen by a human being," she'd said to Angelica in her dry voice. "They were braced for an interspecies liaison. — Edith Pearlman

It was as if she had once been almost smothered and then allowed to live only if she limited her vocabulary and breathed hardly at all. — Edith Pearlman

It's very important for a writer to be unnoticed, as quiet and unnoticed as possible. — Edith Pearlman

But you said the words you knew, which were not always the ones you meant. — Edith Pearlman