9 Quotes & Sayings By Carrie Newcomer

Carrie Newcomer has been a full-time writer since 1984. Her first book, Facing the Fire, was published by Random House in 1999. She is the author of the National Book Award finalist novels Etta and The Grandmothers and three other bestsellers, including her most recent novel, A Change of Heart. She has written for a wide variety of publications including The New York Times Book Review, O: The Oprah Magazine, Gift from the Sea: The Gift of Love in America and many regional newspapers and magazines.

1
There are some questions, there are some answers, the simple ones, the most important ones, that cannot be approached or even seen, until we go out looking for something else entirely. Carrie Newcomer
2
But miracles do happen, every shining now and then. If not now, if not now, tell me when. From "If Not Now Carrie Newcomer
3
Every night before I go to sleep I say out loud three things that I am grateful for, all the significant, insignificant, extraordinary, ordinary stuff of my life. It is s small practice and humble, and yet, I find I sleep better holding what lightens and softens my life every so briefly at the end of the day. Carrie Newcomer
4
A dog is grateful for what is, which I am finding to be the soundest kind of wisdom and very good theology. Carrie Newcomer
5
Something good happened to my writing when stopped being afraid to do something simple, for the fear that people might think I couldn’t do something more complex. Don’t be confused by the word simple. Simple is not easy, it is clear voiced, and fearlessly elegant. Carrie Newcomer
6
Dear heart, we embrace the song and the story and all our gifts because the world has such great need, and because the world exceedingly rejoices, and because there is no sadder thing than to leave this world having never really shown up. Carrie Newcomer
7
A Permeable Life is about what presses out from the heart, what comes in at a slant and what shimmers below the surface of things. To live permeably is to be open-hearted and audacious, to risk showing up as our truest self, and embracing a willingness to be astonished. Carrie Newcomer
8
Our culture reasons that because we fell there is not enough time, we should increase our pace, multitask, and fit more into our already overbooked days. But even though it is counterintuitive to popular wisdom, perhaps the more effective response to the limits of time is to live more fully in the moment, to savor it and expand it. Carrie Newcomer