Bruce Coville quotes:

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  • I feel like a very lucky person. From the time I was young, I had a dream of becoming a writer. Now that dream has come true, and I am able to make my living doing something I really love.

  • Like most people, I was not able to start selling my stories right away. So I had many other jobs along the way to becoming a writer, including toy maker, gravedigger, cookware salesman, and assembly line worker. Eventually, I became an elementary teacher and worked with second and fourth graders.

  • Wherever they may have come from, and wherever they may have gone, unicorns live inside the true believer's heart. Which means as long as we can dream, there will be unicorns.

  • Chains, said the Tinker, coming up behind her. They bind us, whether we want them to or not. But a heart without chains would have nothing to hold it, might simply blow away.

  • Hey, Geekoid!" yelled Duncan Dougal, "Why do you read so much? Don't you know how to watch TV?

  • I grew up around the corner from my grandparents' dairy farm, which was three miles outside of a small town called Phoenix.

  • Ideas are all around you - everything gives you ideas. But the real source is the part of your brain that dreams.

  • Withholding information is the essence of tyranny. Control of the flow of information is the tool of the dictatorship.

  • The first time I can remember thinking that I would like to be a writer came in sixth grade, when our teacher Mrs. Crandall gave us an extended period of time to write a long story. I loved doing it. I started working seriously at becoming a writer when I was seventeen.

  • I loved teaching. I used to teach fourth grade.

  • Every book is like starting over again. I've written books every way possible - from using tight outlines to writing from the seat of my pants. Both ways work.

  • I am ignoring you. In fact, I think you are a figment of my imagination.

  • The real heroes are the librarians and teachers who at no small risk to themselves refuse to lie down and play dead for censors.

  • My writing works best when I remember that bookish child who adored reading and gear the work toward him.

  • Luster, bring me home.

  • In terms of age, I think I've covered about as wide a range as is possible, having written everything from picture books to early chapter books to middle grade novels to YA to one adult novel - and having been editor and lead writer for a magazine for retired people!

  • Protective coloration...you learn to use it to get along in the world if you want. Only I got sick of living in the box the world prescribed; it was far to small to hold me. So I knocked down a few walls.

  • Sometimes when you mend a chain, the place where you fix it is strongest of all... Never was a chain that couldn't be broken. Sometimes its even a good idea.

  • When I go into schools to speak, I am not giving a speech - it's really a one-man show. I call it 'didactic standup.'

  • All these guys picking on smart kids and calling them geeks and dweebs are going to grow up and want to know why they don't do something about the terrible state the world is in. I can tell you why. By the time they grow up, most of the kids who realy could have changed things are wrecked.

  • Gadfangled girl things, always robbed me of my common sense.

  • The first draft of a story is the writer's clay.

  • There's lots of kinds of chains. You can't see most of them, the one's that bind folks together. But people build them, link by link. Sometimes the links are weak, snap like this one did. That's another funny thing, now that I think of it. Sometimes when you mend a chain, the place where you fix it is strongest of all.

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