Hallie Ephron quotes:

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  • A man notices a woman's figure when she walks in a room. Women have eight million words for blue; a man says dark blue or light blue.

  • I haven't given any thought to collaborating with my sisters. It would be great fun. My daughter Molly is a wonderful writer - someday I'd love to collaborate with her.

  • The book that made a lasting impression was the one my mother gave each of us when she decided we were ready for our first 'adult novel,' Lucy Maud Montgomery's 'The Blue Castle.'

  • Phoebe Wolkind Ephron cracked wise like Dorothy Parker and looked like Katharine Hepburn.

  • Outlining is like putting on training wheels. It gives me the courage to write, but we always go off the outline.

  • I'm sharpest early, and though I can rewrite any time, day or night, I'm useless after noon when it comes to writing first draft.

  • My rule of writing is that no one can do what you can do, so jealousy or competitiveness are pointless. I am always happy when one of my sisters has a book published that I get to read.

  • Everyone thinks when they start writing that they can't do it. I was lucky. My sister Delia was the most important person in terms of encouraging me.

  • I'd long wanted to write about that moment when a woman steps off the career track to have her first child. For me, that was a scary time.

  • As we got older, we grew comfortable in roles that met our parents' expectations. Nora was the smart one. Delia, the comedian. I was the pretty, obedient one. And Amy was the adventurous mischief-maker.

  • The book that made a lasting impression was the one my mother gave each of us when she decided we were ready for our first adult novel, Lucy Maud Montgomerys The Blue Castle.

  • For me, a good YA novel is the best kind of comfort food.

  • A man notices a womans figure when she walks in a room. Women have eight million words for blue; a man says dark blue or light blue.

  • I was an outsider, never quite part of what was going on, always looking in. It turned out to be great preparation for writing fiction.

  • Even though I got a late start, first publishing an essay when I was 50 years old, I've since written eight suspense novels.

  • I don't think anybody in my family meant there to be any pressure for me to write. But our parents were incredibly verbal and wrote for a living. The house was full of books, and we all grew up steeped in language. I mean, our mother recited poetry at the dinner table.

  • Our house was awash in books, and my mother doled out her favorites like they were special treats - which they were.

  • Write what you care about, what interests and intrigues you.

  • The truth is rarely as dreadful or as terrifying as what one imagines.

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