9 Quotes & Sayings By David Lodge

David Lodge is a prize-winning novelist, who was born in London in 1945. His fiction has been called "a brilliant modern reinvention of the English novel" by James Wood. Lodge is the author of eleven novels, including the Booker Prize-winning The British Museum Is Falling Down (1987), The Completionist (1990), Harmless Entertainment (2001), Nice Work (2009) and The British Museum Is Falling Down Again (2013). His most recent novel, Changing Places , was published in 2015 Read more

He has also published a collection of essays and a collection of interviews with his fellow writers: The Art of Fiction: Interviews with Leading Authors . He was made a CBE in 2000 and an Honorary Fellow of Goldsmiths College, University of London in 2007.

1
As is perhaps obvious, Morris Zapp had no great esteem for his fellow-labourers in the vineyards of literature. They seemed to him vague, fickle, irresponsible creatures, who wallowed in relativism like hippopotami in mud, with their nostrils barely protruding into the air of common-sense. They happily tolerated the existence of opinions contrary to their own – they even, for God’s sake, sometimes changed their minds. Their pathetic attempts at profundity were qualified out of existence and largely interrogative in mode. They liked to begin a paper with some formula like, ‘I want to raise some questions about so-and-so’, and seemed to think they had done their intellectual duty by merely raising them. This manoeuvre drove Morris Zapp insane. Any damn fool, he maintained, could think of questions; it was answers that separated the men from the boys. . David Lodge
2
London, December 1915. In the master bedroom (never was the estate agent's epithet more appropriate) of Flat 21, Carlyle Mansions, Cheyne Walk, Chelsea, the distinguished author is dying - slowly, but surely. In Flanders, less than two hundred miles away, other men are dying more quickly, more painfully, more pitifully - young men, mostly, with their lives still before them, blank pages that will never be filled. The author is seventy-two. He has had an interesting and varied life, written many books, travelled widely, enjoyed the arts, moved in society (one winter he dined out 107 times), and owns a charming old house in Rye as well as the lease of this spacious London flat with its fine view of the Thames. He has had deeply rewarding friendships with both men and women. If he has never experienced sexual intercourse, that was by his own choice, unlike the many young men in Flanders who died virgins either for lack of opportunity or because they hoped to marry and were keeping themselves chaste on principle. . David Lodge
3
It's a special form of scholarly neurosis, ´ said Camel. `He's no longer able to distinguish between life and literature.´ David Lodge
4
To read is to surrender oneself to an endless displacement of curiosity and desire from one sentence to another, from one action to another, from one level of a text to another. The text unveils itself before us, but never allows itself to be possessed; and instead of trying to possess it we should take pleasure in its teasing David Lodge
5
To some people, there is no noise on earth as exciting as the sound of three or four big fan-jet engines rising in pitch, as the plane they are sitting in swivels at the end of the runway and, straining against its brakes, prepares for takeoff. The very danger in the situation is inseparable from the exhilaration it yields. You are strapped into your seat now, there is no way back, you have delivered yourself into the power of modern technology. You might as well lie back and enjoy it. . David Lodge
6
Think of a ball of steel as large as the world, and a fly alighting on it once every million years. When the ball of steel is rubbed away by the friction, eternity will not even have begun. David Lodge
7
Universities are the cathedrals of the modern age. They shouldn't have to justify their existence by utilitarian criteria. David Lodge
8
Literature is mostly about sex and not much about having children and life is the other way around. David Lodge