Patricia MacLachlan quotes:

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  • I have to write what I can write, and writing the text of a picture book is like walking a tightrope, if you ramble off... As my friend Julius Lester says, 'A picture book is the essence of an experience.'

  • I can always tell when I'm about to start writing. I go through cycles in reading. When I'm beginning to start to write something, I start reading what I think of as good literature. I read things with wonderful language.

  • Fact and fiction are different truths.

  • I have to write what I can write, and writing the text of a picture book is like walking a tightrope, if you ramble off... As my friend Julius Lester says, A picture book is the essence of an experience.

  • I have great respect for children. And I have great respect for their ability as writers.

  • My mother, as a girl, had remembered this woman from Maine, someone who was part of the extended family somehow, and I recall her talking about this great, risk-taking woman. There are the most amazing, heroic stories in everybody's lives.

  • My inspiration for writing is all the wonderful books that I read as a child and that I still read. I think that for those of us who write, when we find a wonderful book written by someone else, we don't really get jealous, we get inspired, and that's kind of the mark of what a good writer is.

  • Looking back, I see that I write books about brothers and sisters, about what makes up a family, what works and what is nurturing.

  • I'm working on a bunch of things with my daughter Emily. In some ways, she's a smarter and better editor than I am.

  • I love to talk to children about making mistakes. Its important that I tell them about how I dont get it right the first time. We live in such a perfectionist society, and they see so many finished products and polished performances.

  • Im working on a bunch of things with my daughter Emily. In some ways, shes a smarter and better editor than I am.

  • My greatest fear is being somewhere without a book.

  • What is perfect? Journey, a thing doesn't have to be perfect to be fine. That goes for a picture. That goes for life....Things can be good enough.

  • You should know that there are some things for which there are no answers, no matter how beautiful the words may be.

  • Each time I write a new piece, whether a novel, a picture book, a speech or anything, really, it has so much to do with what I'm going through personally or a problem I'm trying to work out. When I wrote my novel 'Baby,' my three children had all just gone out the door.

  • Being married to a psychologist, I realize that I learn more from imperfections.

  • Where else," I will say, "does an old turtle crossing the path Make all the difference in the world~?

  • I have great editors, and I always have. Somehow, great editors ask the right questions or pose things to you that get you to write better. It's a dance between you, your characters, and your editor.

  • All the world can be found in poetry. All you need to see and hear. All the moments, good and bad, joyous and sad.

  • I never work from an outline, and often I dont know how the story will end.

  • I think its important to remember where I began. I know that when I talk to other writers, say, writers from the South or writers from abroad, its where they begin as children that is important to them.

  • I, myself, write to change my life, to make it come out the way I want it to. But other people write for other reasons: to see more closely what it is they are thinking about, what they may be afraid of. Sometimes writers write to solve a problem, to answer their own question. All these reasons are good reasons. And that is the most important thing I'll ever tell you. Maybe it is the most important thing you'll ever hear. Ever.

  • In a way, my childhood was one long bunch of pages... I read and read and read.

  • Life is made up of circles ... Life is not a straight line ... And sometimes we circle back to a past time. But we are not the same. We are changed forever.

  • There is always something to miss, no matter where you are.

  • Sometimes poetry--words--give us a small, lovely look at ourselves. And sometimes that is enough.

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