The roundness of life’s design may be a sign that there is a presence beyond ourselves.
About Wally Lamb
Wally Lambis an American author known as the writer of the novels She’s Come Undone and I Know This Much Is True, both of which were selected for Oprah’s Book Club. He was the director of the Writing Center at Norwich Free Academy in Norwich from 1989 to 1998 and has taught Creative Writing in the English Department at the University of Connecticut.
More quotes from Wally Lamb
The roundness of life’s design may be a sign that there is a presence beyond ourselves.
American novelist
Love stories are probably all I’ve ever been able to write or want to write.
American novelist
Accept what people offer. Drink their milkshakes. Take their love.
American novelist
When I was a kid, I was surrounded by girls: older sisters, older girl cousins just down the street… except for an older boy named Vito who threw rocks. Each year I would wish for a baby brother. It never happened.
American novelist
I think I write fiction for the opportunity to get beyond the limits of my own life.
American novelist
Love comes in far more shapes and sizes than what the family-values crowd condones, of course.
American novelist
I wanted to connect a modern story with a myth that I had read.
American novelist
Human behavior in the midst of hardship caught my attention very early on, and my first stories were all pictures, no words.
American novelist
As my early drawings warned me, where humans go, lions and tidal waves follow.
American novelist
I like to be surprised. The best writing is when it defies me, when it starts going a different way than I had planned.
American novelist
I love the most the students with troubled lives.
American novelist
However far fiction writers stray from their own lives and experiences – and I stray pretty far from mine – I think, ultimately, that we may be writing what we need to write in some way, albeit unconsciously.
American novelist
When I was a kid… I needed to belong.
American novelist
I like to write first-person because I like to become the character I’m writing.
American novelist