Tobias Wolff Quotes (32 Quotes)


    Like so many writers I started writing stories because I didn't have much time for anything else.

    You have to be kind of clued into them, they are a world of their own, and most people find them disappointing because the best short stories are not constructed like novels.

    Memory is funny. Once you hit a vein the problem is not how to remember but how to control the flow.

    You don't teach information in a writing workshop.

    I try to help people become the best possible editors of their own work, to help them become conscious of the things they do well, of the things they need to look at again, of the wells of material they have not even begun to dip their buckets into.


    Everything has to be pulling weight in a short story for it to be really of the first order.

    One of the last courses I taught was on the Russian short story, which I love.

    Most of us don't live lives that lend themselves to novelistic expression, because our lives are so fragmented.

    A novel invites digression and a little relaxation of the grip because a reader can't endure being held that tightly in hand for so long a time.

    But as my brother was doing his research for a book about my father, it became his opinion that the most influential anti-semitism my father encountered when he was growing up was from Jews, because his relatives were German Jews, and doctors.

    There are writers who do start doing the same thing again and again and almost inevitably fall into self-parody.

    I teach one semester a year, and this year I'm just teaching one course during that semester, a writing workshop for older students in their late 20s and early 30s, people in our graduate program who are already working on a manuscript and trying to bring it to completion.

    I have to be honest, of course, but I have to be sure that my honesty comes in a form that is not destructive because it can very easily become so.

    And you can tell the writers who do it - Robert Stone, for example, who with each new novel is doing something new. I appreciate that in other writers.

    I love Chekhov. I could go on all day about him.

    So you're continually searching for new ways of using the story form to most perfectly contain and express the story you're telling.

    There's a joy in writing short stories, a wonderful sense of reward when you pull certain things off.

    Perhaps that is why the novel flourished in England. You had these communities that would stay put and people would see one another all the time and cause one another to change and have the opportunity to observe the changes over time.

    Because I don't have to be careful of people's feelings when I teach literature, and I do when I'm teaching writing.

    Work for most people is really very social, and the actual thinking is often done in community.

    It's probably why I'm a short story writer. I tend to remember things in the past in narrative form, in story form, and I grew up around people who told stories all the time.

    Of course it's why you want to become a writer - because you have the liberty to do that, but once you have the liberty you also have the obligation to do it.

    That, for me, is a very important test of a young writer's commitment because most of them are going to have to continue doing that when they've finished the program.

    The reader really has to step up to the plate and read a short story.

    Anybody can be very destructive in that position without at all meaning to be, and I know that I have been inadvertently destructive in the past for certain people on certain occasions.

    I believe that the short story is as different a form from the novel as poetry is, and the best stories seem to me to be perhaps closer in spirit to poetry than to novels.

    The short story, on the other hand, is the perfect American form.

    But a lot of writers - and I'm one of them - do tend to feel dissatisfied. It makes you a little hard to live with, but it's a goad and does keep you alert and restless.

    We are made to persist. Thats how we find out who we are.

    I'm very conscious of working from memory but I also know that someone else who was there at the same moment would write something different about it.

    When I was about 14 or 15 I decided to become a writer and never for a moment since have I wanted to do anything else.

    Because the more you write the more you're aware of the weight of your tradition and the difficulties of the form and the more you have already done that you do not want to do again.


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