Literature The Human Quotes
Collection of top 36 famous quotes about Literature The Human
Literature The Human Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Literature The Human quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
It's a heartening fact about the human race that utopian fiction precedes dystopian fiction in the evolution of literature.
— Paul Di Filippo
When you are falling short in vocabulary to explain the emotion in your story.Than you are writing the right story
— Tushar Upreti
Every book has it's destiny, Like a human life , Sometime when an Author is dead the destiny of the book begins" The days of Childhood !!!!!
— Tushar Upreti
What good literature can do and does do - far greater than any importation of morality - is touch the human soul.
— Karen Swallow Prior
Literature seems to offer lessons in human nature that help us decode the world around us and be better friends.
— Nicholas Kristof
The crown of literature is poetry. It is the end and aim. It is the sublimest activity od the human mind. It is the achievement of beauty.
— W. Somerset Maugham
The study of social progress is today not less needed in literature than is the analysis of the human heart.
— Alfred De Vigny
Sexual desire is only the frustrated desire to eat human flesh.
— Christopher Frayling
Because of literature we can decipher, at least partially, the hieroglyphic that existence tends to be for the great majority of human beings.
— Mario Vargas-Llosa
Yet when books have been read and reread, it boils down to the horse, his human companion, and what goes on between them.
— Walter Farley
The rest, called literature, is a dossier of human imbecility for the guidance of future professors.
— Tristan Tzara
In the end, you have to choose whether or not to trust someone.
— Sophie Kinsella
Heretics are the only [bitter] remedy against the entropy of human thought.
("Literature, Revolution, and Entropy") — Yevgeny Zamyatin
("Literature, Revolution, and Entropy") — Yevgeny Zamyatin
Literature is the human activity that takes the fullest and most precise account of variousness, possibility, complexity, and difficulty.
— Lionel Trilling
How has the human spirit ever survived the terrific literature with which it has had to contend?
— Wallace Stevens
Literature at its fullest takes human nature as its theme. That's the kind of writing that interests me.
— Damon Galgut
The Alice books belong to a branch of literature that speaks deeply and clearly to the human psyche--stories of the journey.
— Stephanie Lovett Stoffel
[Social] science fiction is that branch of literature which is concerned with the impact of scientific advance on human beings.
— Isaac Asimov
There is even - as with no other game - a fascinating detective literature, a wry commentary on the human comedy, implicit in the book of rules.
— Alistair Cooke
Literature is the voice of the human heart.
— Graham Swift
The world of literature is a world where there is no reality except that of the human imagination.
— Northrop Frye
For me, baseball is the most nourishing game outside of literature. They both are re-tellings of human experience.
— A. Bartlett Giamatti
I write and read with the assumption that literature contains knowledge of human experience that is not available otherwise.
— Aleksandar Hemon
It's your fiction that interests me. Your studies of the interplay of human motives and emotion.
— Isaac Asimov
I've always believed you go to literature to find the shared human experience, not the categorized human experience.
— Alice McDermott
Literature is the daughter of heaven, who descended upon earth to soften and charm all human ills.
— Jacques-Henri Bernardin De Saint-Pierre
Literature is an inquiry into the deepest yearnings of the human spirit.
— Ernest L. Boyer
It seems that the analysis of character is the highest human entertainment. And literature does it, unlike gossip, without mentioning names.
— Isaac Bashevis Singer
The Bible stands alone in human literature in its elevated conception of manhood, in character and conduct.
— Henry Ward Beecher
I think it is a quest of literature throughout the ages to describe the human condition.
— Werner Herzog