It’s those damn critics again.
About Irwin Shaw
Irwin Shawwas an American playwright, screenwriter, novelist, and short-story author whose written works have sold more than 14 million copies. He is best known for two of his novels: The Young Lions (1948), about the fate of three soldiers during World War II, which was made into a film of the same name starring Marlon Brando and Montgomery Clift, and Rich Man, Poor Man (1970), about the fate of two brothers and a sister in the post-World War II decades, which in 1976 was made into a popular miniseries starring Peter Strauss, Nick Nolte, and Susan Blakely.
More quotes from Irwin Shaw
A writer has to live with a sense of honor.
American writer (1913-1984)
I don’t think that the writer is regarded as a freak by Americans.
American writer (1913-1984)
It’s those damn critics again.
American writer (1913-1984)
No writer need feel sorry for himself if he writes and enjoys it, even if he doesn’t get paid.
American writer (1913-1984)
You have to expect the raps when you have achieved popularity as a writer.
American writer (1913-1984)
I never show anything to anybody until I’ve finished it.
American writer (1913-1984)
Writing is finally play, and there’s no reason why you should get paid for playing.
American writer (1913-1984)
I cringe when critics say I’m a master of the popular novel. What’s an unpopular novel?
American writer (1913-1984)
The great writers just kept bringing them out. They didn’t care if they repeated themselves.
American writer (1913-1984)
A writer is a human being. He has to live with a sense of honor.
American writer (1913-1984)
I haven’t stuck to any formula. Most great writers stick to the same style, but I wanted to be more various.
American writer (1913-1984)
In the theater, characters have to cut the umbilical cord from the writer and talk in their own voices.
American writer (1913-1984)
If you’re young enough, any kind of writing you do for a short period of time is a marvelous apprenticeship.
American writer (1913-1984)
There are too many books I haven’t read, too many places I haven’t seen, too many memories I haven’t kept long enough.
American writer (1913-1984)
Isaac Singer was born in Poland and doesn’t write in English. Still, he’s an American.
American writer (1913-1984)
I’ve gone on the wagon, but my body doesn’t believe it.
American writer (1913-1984)
Kennedy was a man who liked writers and even I got invited to the White House.
American writer (1913-1984)
You must avoid giving hostages to fortune, like getting an expensive wife, an expensive house, and a style of living that never lets you aford the time to take the chance to write what you wish.
American writer (1913-1984)
I reach my readers regardless of what the critics have written.
American writer (1913-1984)
Ernest Hemingway did a great deal toward making the writer an acceptable public figure; obviously, he was no sissy.
American writer (1913-1984)
My favorite short-story writer is John Cheever.
American writer (1913-1984)
An absolutely necessary part of a writer’s equipment, almost as necessary as talent, is the ability to stand up under punishment, both the punishment the world hands out and the punishment he inflicts upon himself.
American writer (1913-1984)
In Europe, a writer is supposed to improve up until he’s about 75.
American writer (1913-1984)
When I started out in the early 1930s, there were a great many magazines that published short stories. Unfortunately, the short-story market has dwindled to almost nothing.
American writer (1913-1984)
In America, we have the feeling of the doomed young artist. Fitzgerald was the great example of that.
American writer (1913-1984)
Every novelist has a different purpose – and often several purposes which might even be contradictory.
American writer (1913-1984)
Curiously, the United States is full of writers who have one big work in their life and that’s all.
American writer (1913-1984)
I imagine that my characters have become much more complicated than when I first began, which would be normal.
American writer (1913-1984)
Writers of fiction, when they begin, are more likely to try the short form.
American writer (1913-1984)
A good editor understands what you’re talking and writing about and doesn’t meddle too much.
American writer (1913-1984)
All writers are the same – they forget a thousand good reviews and remember one bad one.
American writer (1913-1984)
My attitudes have changed, but somebody would have to read all my books to find out how they have.
American writer (1913-1984)
Writing is like a contact sport, like football. You can get hurt, but you enjoy it.
American writer (1913-1984)
People who light up like Roman candles come down in the dark very quickly.
American writer (1913-1984)
I’m not as hopeful as I was when I was young.
American writer (1913-1984)
Writing for the theater, you find yourself living a nocturnal life.
American writer (1913-1984)
My views naturally have mellowed. Most of the critics have been more or less nice to me.
American writer (1913-1984)
At the height of the McCarthy period, writers were being hounded.
American writer (1913-1984)
I am forced to say that I have many fiercer critics than myself.
American writer (1913-1984)
In a novel, it’s hard to keep track of everybody.
American writer (1913-1984)
The last paragraph, in which you tell what the story is about, is almost always best left out.
American writer (1913-1984)
Posterity makes the judgments. There are going to be a lot of surprises in store for everybody.
American writer (1913-1984)
The romantic idea is that everybody around a writer must suffer for his talent. I think a writer is a citizen of humanity, part of his nation, part of his family. He may have to make some compromises.
American writer (1913-1984)
Special-interest magazines are dangerous places for writers to start out in because the writing quickly falls into a routine and people are likely to find themselves artistically exhausted when they want to work on something of their own.
American writer (1913-1984)
The writer works in a lonely way.
American writer (1913-1984)
I never drink while I’m working, but after a few glasses I get ideas that would never have occurred to me dead sober.
American writer (1913-1984)