Literary Works Quotes
Collection of top 17 famous quotes about Literary Works
Literary Works Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Literary Works quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
A writer's letters should be as literary as his printed works.
— Virginia Woolf
Literary works quite often 'know' things that the reader does not know, or does not know yet, or perhaps will never know.
— Terry Eagleton
Reading literary works enlightened and sheltered me; now I'm paying back by writing.
--"My Confession — Zoe S. Roy
--"My Confession — Zoe S. Roy
The internet to me is kind of like a black hole, and I never really go on it.
— Jennifer Lawrence
Fine doesn't call before dawn.
— Ayana Mathis
It isn't true, is it, Daniel, that music can tame the beasts? Yet, in the end, a song lives.
— Maria Angels Anglada
All great literary works influence us as writers, not their stories as much as their storytelling ability.
— Michael Scott
I was a poet. I had no expectations other than creating a world of art with words that would live on long after I was gone.
— Jason E. Hodges
No one knows the nature of God, or even if God exists. In a sense, all of our religions are literary works of the imagination.
— Alan Lightman
History is indeed stranger than fiction. The twists and turns of human history are too outlandish for to be believable in any work of fiction.
— A.E. Samaan
I divide all literary works into two categories: Those I like and those I don't like. No other criterion exists for me.
— Anton Chekhov
A book sometimes seems to impose a through-line to life that real life doesn't actually have.
— Chris Ware
Everyone is dangerous in here, can't you see that?" he warned.
— Jettie Necole
In cloning, in contrast, reproduction is asexual - the cloned child is the product not of two but of one.
— Leon Kass
I would rather be attacked than unnoticed. For the worst thing you can do to an author is to be silent as to his works.
— Samuel Johnson
One effect that the Nobel Prize seems to have had is that more Arabic literary works have been translated into other languages.
— Naguib Mahfouz
Hinde Esther Kreitman is a forgotten literary foremother, her works largely lost, ignored and out of print.
— Clive Sinclair