23 Quotes & Sayings By Cynthia Ozick

Cynthia Ozick is an award-winning American author of fiction, essays and poetry. She has been awarded fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts, and has served as a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets. A recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship and a Gold Medal for Poetry from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, she is also a recipient of the National Jewish Book Award, and the Prix Femina. She was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1985.

1
If a novel's salient aim is virtue, I want to throw it against the wall. Cynthia Ozick
2
Get thee to the novel! - the novel, that word-woven submarine, piloted by intimation and intuition, that will dive you to the deeps of the heart's maelstrom. Cynthia Ozick
3
Lie, illusion, deception, she said--was that it truly, the universal language we all speak? Cynthia Ozick
4
A writer is dreamed and transfigured into being by spells, wishes, goldfish, silhouettes of trees, boxes of fairy tales dropped in the mud, uncles' and cousins' books, tablets and capsules and powders..and then one day you find yourself leaning here, writing on that round glass table salvaged from the Park View Pharmacy--writing this, an impossibility, a summary of who you came to be where you are now, and where, God knows, is that? . Cynthia Ozick
5
The ground was scorched, the streets teemed with refugees, and these Americans were playing at fleeing! As if they had something to resent, to despise, to scorn, to run away from! As if they weren't the lords of the earth. Cynthia Ozick
6
It seemed to Rosa Lublin that the whole peninsula of Florida was weighted down with regret. Everyone had left behind a real life. Here they had nothing. They were all scarecrows, blown about under the murdering sunball with empty ribcages. Cynthia Ozick
7
The novella will be called, I think, “The Messiah of Stockholm.” It takes place in Stockholm. I’d better say no more, or the Muse will wipe it out. Cynthia Ozick
8
It had always been my habit-- privately I felt it to be an ecstasy-- to enter, as into a mysterious vault, any public library. I was drawn to books that had been read before, novels that girls like myself had cradled and cherished. In my mind-- I suppose in my isolation-- I seized on all those previous readers, and everyone who would read after me, as phantom companions and secret friends. Cynthia Ozick
9
When something does not insist on being noticed when we aren't grabbed by the collar or struck on the skull by a presence or an event we take for granted the very things that most deserve our gratitude. Cynthia Ozick
10
What we remember from childhood we remember forever-permanent ghosts stamped imprinted eternally seen. Cynthia Ozick
11
The engineering is secondary to the vision. Cynthia Ozick
12
After a certain number of years our faces become our biographies. Cynthia Ozick
13
Dedication to one's work in the world is the only possible sanctifica-tion. Religion in all its forms is dedication to Someone Else's work not yours. Cynthia Ozick
14
Real apprenticeship is ultimately always to the self. Cynthia Ozick
15
Profound subject matter can be encompassed in small space - for proof, look at any sonnet by Shakespeare! Cynthia Ozick
16
In books, as in life, there are no second chances. On second thought: it's the next work, still to be written, that offers the second chance. Cynthia Ozick
17
Traveling is seeing it is the implicit that we travel by. Cynthia Ozick
18
An essay is a thing of the imagination. If there is information in an essay, it is by-the-by, and if there is an opinion, one need not trust it for the long run. A genuine essay rarely has an educational, polemical, or sociopolitical use; it is the movement of a free mind at play. Cynthia Ozick
19
To say that such-and-such a circumstance is 'Kafkaesque' is to admit to the denigration of an imagination that has burned a hole in what we take to be modernism - even in what we take to be the ordinary fabric and intent of language. Nothing is like 'The Hunger Artist.' Nothing is like 'The Metamorphosis.' Cynthia Ozick
20
I don't agree with the sentiment 'write what you know.'... I think one should write what one doesn't know. The world is bigger and wider and more complex than our small subjective selves. One should prod, goad the imagination. Cynthia Ozick
21
Hebrew as a contemporary language, especially for poetry, is no longer the language of the Bible; but neither is it not the language of the Bible. Cynthia Ozick
22
In 1952, I had gone to England on a literary pilgrimage, but what I also saw, even at that distance from the blitz, were bombed-out ruins and an enervated society, while the continent was still, psychologically, in the grip of its recent atrocities. Cynthia Ozick