Edna Ferber quotes:

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  • Living the past is a dull and lonely business; looking back strains the neck muscles, causing you to bump into people not going your way.

  • Only amateurs say that they write for their own amusement. Writing is not an amusing occupation. It is a combination of ditch-digging, mountain-climbing, treadmill and childbirth. Writing may be interesting, absorbing, exhilarating, racking, relieving. But amusing? Never!

  • America -- rather, the United States -- seems to me to be the Jew among the nations. It is resourceful, adaptable, maligned, envied, feared, imposed upon. It is warm-hearted, over-friendly; quick-witted, lavish, colorful; given to extravagant speech and gestures; its people are travelers and wanderers by nature, moving, shifting, restless; swarming in Fords, in ocean liners; craving entertainment; volatile. The chuckle among the nations of the world.

  • A stricken tree, a living thing, so beautiful, so dignified, so admirable in its potential longevity, is, next to man, perhaps the most touching of wounded objects.

  • Christmas isn't a season. It's a feeling.

  • The ideal view for daily writing, hour for hour, is the blank brick wall of a cold-storage warehouse. Failing this, a stretch of sky will do, cloudless if possible.

  • In New York the sky is bluer, and the grass is greener, and the girls are prettier, and the steaks are thicker, and the buildings are higher, and the streets are wider, and the air is finer, than the sky, or the grass, or the girls, or the steaks, or the air of any place else in the world.

  • It's difficult to write a really good short story because it must be a complete and finished reflection of life with only a few words to use as tools. There isn't time for bad writing in a short story.

  • Being an old maid is like death by drowning, a really delightful sensation after you cease to struggle.

  • Any garment which is cut to fit you is much more becoming, even if it is not so splendid as a garment which has been cut to fit somebody not of your stature.

  • Science had married the wilderness and was taming the savage shrew.

  • A closed mind is a dying mind.

  • Life can't defeat a writer who is in love with writing, for life itself is a writer's lover until death.

  • I am not belittling the brave pioneer men but the sunbonnet as well as the sombrero has helped to settle this glorious land of ours.

  • Roast Beef, Medium, is not only a food. It is a philosophy. Seated at Life's Dining Table, with the menu of Morals before you, your eye wanders a bit over the entrees, the hors d'oeuvres, and the things a la though you know that Roast Beef, Medium, is safe and sane, and sure.

  • Spring ... made fair false promises which summer was called upon to keep.

  • A whole roomful of Jews is like a charged battery. The vitality sparks seem to fly, and frequently the result is a short circuit.

  • But always, to her, red and green cabbages were to be jade and burgundy, chrysoprase and prophyry. Life has no weapons against a woman like that.

  • Books should be cherished, like children, books are for the next generation, like children, like history.

  • When a new post-war generation has grown to puberty and to youth and to manhood and womanhood, it should read, and it should be realistically told, of the futility, the idiocy, the utter depravity of war. For that matter, this instruction could begin at the age of six with the taking of those toy guns out of those toy holsters and throwing them in the ash-cans where they belong.

  • Any man who can look handsome in a dirty baseball suit is an Adonis. There is something about the baggy pants, and the Micawber-shaped collar, and the skull-fitting cap, and the foot or so of tan, or blue, or pink undershirt sleeve sticking out at the arms, that just naturally kills a man's best points.

  • It was part of theTexas ritual? We know about champagne and caviar but we talk hog and hominy.

  • Whoever said love conquers all was a fool. Because almost everything conquers love - or tries to.

  • Now gae your wa'sTho'anes as gude As ever happit flesh and blude, Yet part we maunthe case sae hard is, Amang the writers and the bardies That lang they'll brook the auld I trow, Or neibours cry,'Weel brook the new'.

  • I don't know what it is that makes a writer go to his desk in his shut-off room day after day after year after year unless it is the sure knowledge that not to have done the daily stint of writing that day is infinitely more agonizing than to write.

  • The goat's business is none of the sheep's concern.

  • A woman can look both moral and exciting... if she also looks as if it was quite a struggle.

  • I think in order to write really well and convincingly, one must be somewhat poisoned by emotion, dislike, displeasure, resentment, fault-finding, imagination, passionate remonstrance, a sense of injustice-they all make fine fuel.

  • Writing is not an amusing occupation. It is a combination of ditch-digging, mountain-climbing, treadmill and childbirth.

  • Does one eat peanuts at a ball game?' 'It ain't hardly legal if you don't.

  • The small town smart set is deadly serious about its smartness.

  • Big doesn't necessarily mean better. Sunflowers aren't better than violets.

  • If men ever discovered how tough women actually are, they would be scared to death.

  • Your idea of bliss is to wake up on a Monday morning knowing you haven't a single engagement for the entire week. You are cradled in a white paper cocoon tied up with typewriter ribbon.

  • Writers should be read but not seen. Rarely are they a winsome sight.

  • If American politics are too dirty for women to take part in, there's something wrong with American politics.

  • Roast beef, medium, is not only a food. It is a philosophy.

  • It's terrible to realize you don't learn how to live until you're ready to die, and then it's too late.

  • I never would just open a door and walk through, I had to bust it down for the hell of it. I just naturally liked doing things the hard way.

  • I sometimes wonder ... if the land is not destroying the people who inhabit it as the people who inhabit it are destroying the land. A magic continent, a Peculiar Treasure, stuffed with riches, millions in it are starving in the midst of plenty.

  • There are only two kinds of people in the world that really count. One kind's wheat and the other kind's emeralds.

  • The feminine in the man is the sugar in the whisky. The masculine in the woman is the yeast in the bread. Without these ingredients the result is flat, without tang or flavor.

  • I suppose it is a gift, being young, but it isn't special. We've all got it, early in life.

  • ... home isn't always the place where you were born and bred. Home is the place where your everyday clothes are, and where somebody or something needs you.

  • Funny, isn't it, how your whole life goes by while you think you're only planning the way you're going to live it?

  • One can summon courage and fortitude to face tragedy; irritations and frustrations are a cloud of mosquitoes that nip and sting and drive one frantic.

  • I'm tired of hearing you men say that this and that and the other isn't woman's work. Any work is woman's work that a woman can do well.

  • Emma McChesney was engaged in that nerve-wracking process known as getting things out of the way. When Emma McChesney aimed to get things out of the way she did not use a shovel; she used a road-drag.

  • If it's freedom you want, come to Texas. No one there tells you what to do and how you have to do it.

  • All the difference in the world between the movies and the thrill I get out of a play at the theater. Ay, yes! Like fooling around with paper dolls when you could be playing with a real live baby.

  • Take Texas the way Texas takes bourbon. Straight. It goes down easier.

  • A writer's working hours are his waking hours. He is working as long as he is conscious and frequently when he isn't.

  • No one in the United States has the right to own millions of acres of American land, I don't care how they came by it.

  • It sounds so far away and different. I like different places. I like any places that isn't here.

  • People in big empty places are likely to behave very much as the gods did on Olympus.

  • There are people who have a penchant for cities-more than that, a talent for them, a gift of sensing them, of feeling their rhythm and pulsebeats, as others have a highly developed music sense, or color reaction. It is a thing that cannot be acquired.

  • The writer is a writer because he cannot help it. It is a compulsion.

  • Bizarre as was the name she bore, Kim Ravenal always said she was thankful it had been no worse.

  • Any piece of furniture, I don't care how beautiful it is, has got to be lived with, and kicked about, and rubbed down, and mistreated by servants, and repolished, and knocked around and dusted and sat on or slept in or eaten off of before it develops its real character ... A good deal like human beings.

  • Writing, to be memorable, must be done in a state of impassioned serenity.

  • Perhaps too much of everything is as bad as too little.

  • But I have felt that to be a Jew was, in some ways at least, to be especially privileged.

  • Men often marry their mothers.

  • Roast Beef, Medium, is not only a food. It is a philosophy. ... Roast Beef, Medium, is safe, and sane, and sure.

  • here in Texas maybe we've got into the habit of confusing bigness with greatness.

  • [Women] ... is nothin' but little girls in long skirts, and their hair done up.

  • The very rich and the very social are, often, the very stuffy.

  • Most of the men regarded Europe as a wine list. In their mental geography Rheims, Rhine, Moselle, Bordeaux, Champagne, or Würzburg were not localities but libations.

  • You lose in the end unless you know how the wheel is fixed or can fix it yourself.

  • Housework's the hardest work in the world. That's why men won't do it.

  • Cherry cobbler is shortcake with a soul.

  • Anything can have happened in Oklahoma. Practically everything has.

  • don't you hate people who say they're not complaining and then complain?

  • A placated bully is a hand-fed bully.

  • Nicknames are fond names. We do not give them to people we dislike.

  • About mistakes it's funny. You got to make your own; and not only that, if you try to keep people from making theirs they get mad.

  • There are ... just two kinds of girls. Those who go down town Saturday nights, and those who don't.

  • There's no sauce for play like work.

  • The astronomers tell us that other planets are gifted with two - four - even nine lavish moons. Imagine the romantic possibilities of nine moons.

  • There are two ways of doing battle against Disgrace. You may live it down; or you may run away from it and hide. The first method is heart-breaking, but sure. The second cannot be relied upon because of the uncomfortable way Disgrace has of turning up at your heels.

  • People permit life to slide past them like a deft pickpocket, their purse-not yet missed and now too late-in his hand.

  • I think that in order to write really well and convincingly, one must be somewhat poisoned by emotion.

  • I never go to weddings. Waste of time. Person can get married a dozen times. Lots of folks do. Family like ours, know everybody in the state of Texas and around outside, why, you could spend your life going to weddings. But a funeral, that's different. You only die once.

  • Wasn't marriage, like life, unstimulating and unprofitable and somewhat empty when too well ordered and protected and guarded. Wasn't it finer, more splendid, more nourishing, when it was, like life itself, a mixture of the sordid and the magnificent; of mud and stars; of earth and flowers; of love and hate and laughter and tears and ugliness and beauty and hurt.

  • It's terrible to realize that you don't learn how to live until you're ready to die; and, then it's too late.

  • A story must simmer in its own juice for months or even years before it's ready to serve.

  • I sat staring up at a shelf in my workroom from which thirty-one books identically dressed in neat dark green leather stared back at me with a sort of cold hostility like children who resent their parents. Don't stare at us like that! they said. Don't blame us if we didn't turn out to be the perfection you expected. We didn't ask to be brought into the world.

  • But almost any place is Baghdad if you don't know what will happen in it.

  • There is an interesting resemblance in the speeches of dictators, no matter what country they may hail from or what language they may speak.

  • I like any place that isn't here.

  • writers of novels are so busy being solitary that they haven't time to meet one another. But then, a writer learns nothing from a writer, conversationally. If a writer has anything witty, profound or quotable to say he doesn't say it. He's no fool. He writes it.

  • celebratin' New Year's Eve is like eatin' oranges. You got to let go your dignity t' really enjoy 'em.

  • Christmas is not a season. It is a feeling.

  • Imported actors, like certain wines, sometimes do not stand the ocean trip. This can be as true of American actors in Europe as it is of European actors in America.

  • To be alive is a fine thing. It is the finest thing in the world, though hazardous. It is a unique thing. It happens only once in a lifetime. To be alive, to know consciously that you are alive, and to relish that knowledge -- this is a kind of magic. Or it may be a kind of madness, exhilarating but harmless.

  • No woman ought to pretend she's intelligent. And if she is she ought to have the intelligence to pretend she isn't.

  • Opinion! If every one had so little tact as to give their true opinion when it was asked this would be a miserable world.

  • Texas history is a varied, tempestuous, and vast as the state itself. Texas yesterday is unbelievable, but no more incredible than Texas today. Today's Texas is exhilarating, exasperating, violent, charming, horrible, delightful, alive.

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