9 Quotes & Sayings By Adam Haslett

Adam Haslett graduated from the University of New Mexico with a degree in creative writing. He has written four novels, including The Last Days of Night (Liveright, 2009), which was named to the "best books of 2008" list by The New York Times Book Review; and Long Division (Random House, 2010), which was short-listed for the Man Booker Prize—the first American novel to be nominated for that award. His second novel, The Dog Stars (Random House, 2011), won the National Book Award for Fiction and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. In 2012 he received a MacArthur Fellowship for his work as a literary artist.

1
Sound systems are what turn cars into escape vehicles, even if you've got nowhere to go. Adam Haslett
2
Kind of gay? I wanted to say. Do you have any notion how many homosexuals sweated their ass off on the dance floor to make this soaring bit of derivative trash possible? How many died of AIDS, OD'd, or went broke on the way to that girl from Texas cutting a deal... Adam Haslett
3
You don't want to think about it, but there's an ethical limit to what anyone should have to endure. You can't just negate that with sentimentality. With the idea of some indomitable spirit. That's a fairy tale. It's what people say about other people, to avoid the wretchedness. It's just cruelty by other means. Requiring a person to stay alive. For you. Adam Haslett
4
A few months ago, a fog blinded me, thicker than ever before. I slept in the monster’s arms. I felt its breath on my neck, its scaled stomach rising and falling against my back, its head and face invisible as always. I couldn’t pretend anymore to Margaret that I was working. The children receded into noises grating on my ears. I stopped moving. Weeks went by indistinguishable one from another. I could smell the rot of myself, my armpits, my breath, my groin, as though the living part of death had already commenced, the preliminary decomposing, as the will fades. In Dante and Milton hell is vivid. Sin organizes the dead into struggle. The darkness bristles with life. There is story upon story to tell. But in the fog there is nothing to see. The monster you lie with is your own. The struggle is endlessly private. I thought it was over. That one night the beast at my back would squeeze more tightly and I would cease breathing. What remained of me hoped for it. Adam Haslett
5
...I did what most kids do when their world feels destroyed. I tried to care less about what remained... It was untrue, of course. Adam Haslett
6
...I did what most kids do when their world feels destroyed. I tried to care less about what remained... This was untrue, of course. Adam Haslett
7
What do you fear when you fear everything? Time passing and not passing. Death and life. I could say my lungs never filled with enough air, no matter how many puffs of my inhaler I took. Or that my thoughts moved too quickly to complete, severed by a perpetual vigilance. But even to say this would abet the lie that terror can be described, when anyone who's ever known it knows that it has no components but is instead everywhere inside you all the time, until you recognize yourself only by the tensions that string one minute to the next. And yet I keep lying, by describing, because how else can I avoid this second, and the one after it? This being the condition itself: the relentless need to escape a moment that never ends. Adam Haslett
8
It struck me then, for the first time, how unethical anxiety is, how it voids the reality of other people by conscripting them as palliatives for your own fear. Adam Haslett