Quotes by David Guterson
- I often heard about his cases and I often sat in on his trials. In the late 1960s when I was growing up I wanted to be a crusader like him but I didn't want to wear a suit and commute.
- I think of myself as a really happy person.
- My father is a practicing criminal law attorney in the Seattle area.
- My book is traditional. It runs counter to the post-modern spirit.
- It's a brooding melancholy that haunts me.
- It doesn't matter who you are, how many awards you've won, how popular you are, or how much critical acclaim you've had.
- I'm not an urban person.
- I'm interested in themes that endure from generation to generation.
- I write because something inner and unconscious forces me to. That is the first compulsion. The second is one of ethical and moral duty. I feel responsible to tell stories that inspire readers to consider more deeply who they are.
- I was totally absorbed in the real world, the politics, the history, the news, and I just couldn't find my way into the fictional world... When I finally could return to writing the novel, it was in fits and starts.
- I was born in Washington State and have lived here for 42 plus years.
- I think you have an obligation to share what you know as a writer.
- Post-modernism is dead because it didn't address human needs.
- I have traveled the entire state and spent a lot of time out of doors. So I have known the landscape of the Columbia Basin for quite a while, and I have had this strong feeling about it for many years.
- I grew up in Seattle, but I always knew I wanted to leave.
- I became paralyzed as an artist with writer's block.
- Hemingway said the only way to write about a place is to leave it.
- Fiction is socially meaningful.
- Everybody has a world, and that world is completely hidden until we begin to inquire. As soon as we do, that entire world opens to us and yields itself. And you see how full and complex it is.
- Even though I may not intend it when I set out to write the book, these places just emerge as major players in what I'm doing, almost as if they are insisting on it.
- Don Quixote is one that comes to mind in comparison to mine, in that they both involve journeys undertaken by older men. That is unusual, because generally the hero of a journey story is very young.
- Cities produce in me melancholy or a tension I don't need.
- At one level you're condemned to the voice you have. But within those confines, you have a certain amount of freedom to range among your possible voices.
- I have relaxed into my persona as an author, although I used to fight that.
- I was aware that there is an expectation that writers inevitably falter at this stage, that they fail to live up to the promise of their first successful book, that the next book never pleases the way the prior one did. It simply increased my sense of being challenged.
- Writing became an obsessive compulsive habit but I had almost no money so I thought about being an urban firefighter and having lots of free time in which to write or becoming an English teacher and thinking about books and writers on a daily basis. That swayed me.
- There's a certain nostalgia and romance in a place you left.
- Time made me change. I gradually woke up to the realization that this is who I am, an author, a public figure, and I couldn't just hide in my study, tapping away at the keyboard and pretend that I didn't have a role to play beyond stringing words together.
- What some people interpret as brooding melancholy is serenity. I don't feel required to grasp all the time.
- What sustains me is to be with my family and to write.
- When I went to college I took a creative writing class and decided in a week to be a writer.
- When it comes time to sit down and write the next book, you're deathly afraid that you're not up to the task. That was certainly the case with me after Snow Falling on Cedars.
- The real question is: How do you react? What do you do next? Evade responsibilities? Bury yourself in work? What do you do? All three of my novels take up that question, although none gives an answer.