19+ Nick Laird Quotes On Education, Culture And Beauty

Cargo cults fascinate me partly because Christianity itself is in many ways a cargo cult. — Nick Laird

What passes for love is imperfect knowledge. Not knowing, initially, allows faithlessness to dress up as its opposite; casts the inarticulate as enigmatic, the selfish as forgetful, the angry as impassioned. — Nick Laird

She was privileged enough to feel at home anywhere, and to equate squalor with authenticity. — Nick Laird

There used to be one writer rather than a team of writers. It's the old line about a camel being a horse designed by committee. — Nick Laird

In fact, lots of good poetry doesn't work , so I don't mind a bit of mystification or difficulty. — Nick Laird

I'm always reading books, I'm always having encounters, I'm always taking trips. Whatever it is you come up with about how you got started, that's equally true for all the books you didn't start. — Nick Laird

You become a writer because you like to be alone in a room with your books. — Nick Laird

New York is great for writers insofar as you can pay someone to bring you food, to take your washing out and bring it back clean. It enables you. Writers always feel guilty when they're doing anything but writing, and New York allows you to really write all the time if you want to - though my kids put a limit on it. — Nick Laird

A huge portion of Trump voters are incredibly pleased with how he's performing. They see what they want to see. — Nick Laird

The reason that the book exists is because there was a gap in you. You wrote the book to fulfill that gap in some way. — Nick Laird

It seems to me that metaphors come down to a certain idea of interconnectedness - that everything relates to everything else. Metaphors don't believe in autonomy. And in the end, perhaps that idea of interconnectedness is a moral position. — Nick Laird

In terms of poetry, I worry about being far from the voice of my childhood, the rhythms of Ulster speech, and the liveliness of its dialect. I know there is a vitality to New York talk, but living among people of different cultures does mean you're forced to homogenize and lose the interesting words and phrases in order to be understood. — Nick Laird

I don't think there's any law where you have to read a poem and immediately understand it. — Nick Laird

That's what Samuel Johnson said: "Read over your compositions, and wherever you meet with a passage which you think particularly fine, strike it out." — Nick Laird

When you're rereading or editing your book and you start to expect that this work is going to be reviewed, and you can sort of tell which line is going to show up in reviews. — Nick Laird

The whole process of having to put the thing into the world seems so antithetical to the act of writing. Poetry is slightly easier, because there's less money and fewer people involved. You just let a book of poems trickle out in the world, and it finds its own people. Novels are much harder, and you don't think you should have to do some of the things you're made to do. — Nick Laird

Nabokov quote: "I think like a genius, I write like a distinguished author, and I speak like a child." — Nick Laird

The whole point of writing poetry or fiction is that you get to agonize over whatever it is you want to say, and you finally say it, and you get it as perfect as you can make it. Then you're forced to babble freestyle. — Nick Laird

There is such a shelter in each other. — Nick Laird

Life Lessons by Nick Laird

  1. Nick Laird's work emphasizes the importance of understanding the complexities of human relationships, as well as the need to appreciate and celebrate the diversity of cultures.
  2. His novels often explore themes of identity, belonging, and the power of language to shape our experiences and relationships.
  3. Through his writing, Laird encourages readers to think critically about the world around them and to recognize the beauty of our shared humanity.
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