16 Quotes & Sayings By Annie Proulx

Annie Proulx is a writer of fiction, poetry, and essays. Her work has been translated into more than a dozen languages. She is the author of the novels Postcards from the Edge (1989), Close Range (1990), The Shipping News (1995), Brokeback Mountain (2005), and The Swimmer (2008). Her short story "Brokeback Mountain" won the 2007 National Magazine Award for fiction Read more

As a screenwriter, she received an Academy Award nomination for her script for the movie Brokeback Mountain. In 2010, she was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for her novel The Shipping News. She also received a National Book Critics Circle Award in 2005.

1
Again the ranch is on the market and they’ve shipped out the last of the horses, paid everybody off the day before, the owner saying, ‘Give them to the real estate shark, I’m out a here, ” dropping the keys in Ennis’s hand. He might have to stay with his married daughter until he picks up another job, yet he is suffused with a sense of pleasure because Jack Twist was in his dream. Annie Proulx
You should write because you love the shape of stories...
2
You should write because you love the shape of stories and sentences and the creation of different words on a page. Writing comes from reading, and reading is the finest teacher of how to write. Annie Proulx
You’ve got a chance to start out all over again....
3
You’ve got a chance to start out all over again. A new place, new people, new sights. A clean slate. See, you can be anything you want with a fresh start. Annie Proulx
4
No, they didn’t have any money, the sea was dangerous and men were lost, but it was a satisfying life in a way people today do not understand. There was a joinery of lives all worked together, smooth in places, or lumpy, but joined. The work and the living you did was the same things, not separated out like today. Annie Proulx
5
All must pay the debt of nature. Annie Proulx
6
Quoyle experienced moments in all colors, uttered brilliancies, paid attention to the rich sound of waves counting stones, he laughed and wept, noticed sunsets, heard music in rain, said I do. Annie Proulx
7
The thing American people fear about corporations is that they might achieve too much power. We have an antipathy to power even as we admire it. Annie Proulx
8
It takes a year, nephew... a full turn of the calendar, to get over losing someone. Annie Proulx
9
When the watermelons were as large as a child's head, the women boiled them, but they collapsed into a tasteless green mush that no one could eat, not the children, not the cow. Annie Proulx
10
Inside Duquet something like a tightly closed pine cone licked by fire opened abruptly and he exploded with incensed and uncontrollable fury, a life’s pent-up rage. ‘No one helped me, ’ he shrieked, ‘I did everything myself. I endured. I contended with powerful men. I suffered in the wilderness. I accepted the risk I might die. No one helped me! ’ The boy’s gaze shifted, the fever-boiled eyes following Duquet’s rising arm closing only when the tomahawk split his brain. . Annie Proulx
11
I wish I knew how to quit you. Annie Proulx
12
We face up to awful things because we can't go around them, or forget them. The sooner you say 'Yes, it happened, and there's nothing I can do about it, ' the sooner you can get on with your own life. You've got children to bring up. So you've got to get over it. What we have to get over, somehow we do. Even the worst things. Annie Proulx
13
We don’t make the decisions, just does what we’re told where and when we’re told. We lives by rules made somewhere else by sons a bitches don’t know nothin’ about this place. Annie Proulx
14
In every life there are events that reshape one's sense of existence. Afterward, all is different and the past is dimmed. Annie Proulx
15
A kind of joyous hysteria moved into the room, everything flying before the wind, vehicles outside getting dented to hell, the crowd sweaty and the smells of aftershave, manure, clothes dried on the line, your money’s worth of perfume, smoke, booze; the music subdued by the shout and babble through the bass hammer could be felt through the soles of the feet, shooting up the channels of legs to the body fork, center of everything. It is the kind of Saturday night that torches your life for a few hours, makes it seem like something is happening. Annie Proulx