On inspiration
“We do not choose our subjects, they choose themselves…They creep so insidiously, these creatures of the imagination, before I am aware, and they fasten themselves upon the hidden places of the mind, and feed there, and take root, and once they are securely lodged, I cannot banish them. They must develop and become little men and women and tell their story, and once their story is told, they can return to the dust from whence they came and be remembered no more. And what is the dust from whence they sprang? I cannot say. Nor can any writer unless his tales are true ones and not things of the imagination.”
—DAPHNE DU MAURIER, 1938
“I try to keep in mind the delicate relationship between what is unique, perhaps even eccentric, and what is universal. Only in this relationship is there a true subject, worthy of long hours of work.”
—JOYCE CAROL OATES, 1973
“The fundamental truth about writing is that you must have something to say before you worry about your method of saying it.”
—ADELA ROGERS ST. JOHNS, 1953
“Do not write about Something. Write about Everything. Also: Never try to write about Everyone. Always write about Someone.”
—CYNTHIA OZICK, 1967
“Inspiration is like an electric shock – jolting and unexpected, sometimes surprising in its source.”
—SUE GRAFTON, 1977
On memory
“I suppose that psychologically, using painful memories fictionally is a way of getting over them. Personally, I