Saturday, November 9, 2019
The eNotes Blog Top Ten Self-Deprecating Quotes fromAuthors
Top Ten Self-Deprecating Quotes fromAuthors The literary world is a pretentious place, right? You wouldnt think so judging by these ten quotes from authors playfully poking fun at their success. Who knew the Paris Review was such a popular venue in which to be self-deprecating? Know of any others? Tell us in a comment below. 1. Vladimir Nabokov Lolitaà is famous, not I. I am an obscure, doubly obscure, novelist with an unpronounceable name. - inà The Paris Review, 1967 2. Mark Twain I must have a prodigious quantity of mind; it takes me as much as a week sometimes to make it up. ââ¬âà The Innocents Abroad 3. Ray Bradbury A conglomerate heap of trash, thatââ¬â¢s what I am. But it burns with a high flame. - inà The Paris Review, 2010 4. Kurt Vonnegut Slapstickà may be a very bad book. I am perfectly willing to believe that. Everybody else writes lousy books, so why shouldnââ¬â¢t I? What was unusual about the reviews was that they wanted people to admit now that I had never been any good. The reviewer for the Sundayà Timesà actually asked critics who had praised me in the past to now admit in public how wrong theyââ¬â¢d been. My publisher, Sam Lawrence, tried to comfort me by saying that authors were invariably attacked when they became fabulously well-to-doâ⬠¦ I had suffered, all right - but as a badly educated person in vulgar company and in a vulgar trade. It was dishonorable enough that I perverted art for money. I then topped that felony by becoming, as I say, fabulously well-to-do. Well, thatââ¬â¢s just too damn bad for me and for everybody. Iââ¬â¢m completely in print, so weââ¬â¢re all stuck with me and stuck with my books. - inà The Paris Review, 1977 5. Stephen King I am the literary equivalent of a Big Mac and Fries. 6. David Sedaris At the end of a miserable day, instead of grieving my virtual nothing, I can always look at my loaded wastepaper basket and tell myself that if I failed, at least I took a few trees down with me. - Me Talk Pretty One Day 7. Jonathan Lethem Listen, you canââ¬â¢t imagine what a freak I was. I worked in used bookstores as a teenager. I grew up with hippie parents. I lived in a ten-year cultural lag. Atà allà times. I had not the faintest idea what was contemporary. When I got to Bennington, and I found that Richard Brautigan and Thomas Berger and Kurt Vonnegut and Donald Barthelme were not ââ¬Ëthe contemporary,ââ¬â¢ but were in fact awkward and embarrassing and had been overthrown by something else, I was as disconcerted as a time traveler. The world Iââ¬â¢d dwelled in was now apocryphal. No one read Henry Miller and Lawrence Durrell, the Beats were regarded with embarrassment. When all that was swept away, I stopped knowing what contemporary literature was. I didnââ¬â¢t replace it; I just stopped knowing. - inà The Paris Review, 2003 8. John Grisham I canââ¬â¢t change overnight into a serious literary author. You canââ¬â¢t compare apples to oranges. William Faulkner was a great literary genius. I am not. 9. Dorothy Parker I fell into writing, I suppose, being one of those awful children who wrote verses. I went to a convent in New York- the Blessed Sacramentâ⬠¦Ã I was fired from there, finally, for a lot of things, among them my insistence that the Immaculate Conception was spontaneous combustion. - inà The Paris Review, 1956 10. And the self-deprecating author who took it to the highest extreme? Thatd have to be Gary Shteyngart, who created a five minute parody of himself to promote his book Super Sad True Love Story: He really wants to cash in on this whole Hollywood vampire thing, but with werewolves But theyre not wolves, theyre bears. Werebears. Images and quotes courtesy of Flavorwire.
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