7 Quotes & Sayings By Henry Kuttner

Henry Kuttner was born in Montclair, NJ and grew up in New York City and California. He attended the University of California and began writing in college, but did not publish until after his graduation. His first sale came in 1937 with "The Trail Through Time," which appeared in Astounding Science Fiction magazine. His first novel, "The Liberation of L Read more

Sprague de Camp," was published by Gnome Press (Gnome Publishing Co.) in 1944. Kuttner worked for a number of years as a magazine editor and then entered the film industry as a screenwriter and producer in the early 1940s, where he remained until 1955. He authored many scripts for films starring such actors as Tyrone Power and Ronald Reagan, and directed television shows and films such as "The Adventures of Jim Bowie," "The Day the World Ended," and "I Was a Communist for the FBI." In 1976, Time magazine named Kuttner one of America's best science fiction writers, but he is best known for his science fiction novels that include "The Mindworm," "The Cosmic Forge," "The World at the End of Time," "The Conquest of Tiphus," and his classic novel about a young man's struggle to survive on an alien planet, "Tiger! Tiger! Burning Bright."

1
Dr. Manning said he'd thought at first it might be sleeping sickness, or even narcolepsy, whatever that was, but - no, Pete was healthy enough physically. Manoel growled that the boy was bone-lazy, spending his time fishing and reading. Reading! No good could come of such things.' In a way you're right, Manoel, ' Dr. Manning said hesitantly. 'It's natural for a boy to day-dream now and then, but I think Pedro does it too much. I've let him use my library whenever he wanted, but it seems.. h'm.. it seems he reads the wrong things. Fairy tales are very charming, but they don't help a boy to cope with real life.'' Com certeza, ' Manoel agreed. 'You mean he has crazy ideas in the head.'' Oh, they're rather nice ideas, ' Dr. Manning said. 'But they're only fairy tales, and they're beginning to seem true to Pete. You see, Manoel, there are really two worlds, the real one, and the one you make up inside your mind. Sometimes a boy - or even a man - gets to like his dream world so much he just forgets about the real one and lives in the one he's made up.'' I know, ' Manoel said. 'I have seen some who do that. It is a bad thing.'' It would be bad for Pete. He's a very sensitive boy. If you live too much in dreams, you can't face real life squarely.'(" Before I Wake.."). Henry Kuttner
2
This is the story of a boy named Pete Coutinho, who had a spell put on him. Some people might have called it a curse. I don't know. It depends on a lot of things, on whether you've got gipsy blood, like old Beatriz Sousa, who learned a lot about magic from the wild gitana tribe in the mountains beyond Lisbon, and whether you're satisfied with a fisherman's life in Cabrillo.Not that a fisherman's life is a bad one, far from it. By day you go out in the boats that rock smoothly across the blue Gulf waters, and at night you can listen to music and drink wine at the Shore Haven or the Castle or any of the other taverns on Front Street. What more do you want? What more is there? And what does any sensible man, or any sensible boy, want with that sorcerous sort of glamor that can make everything incredibly bright and shining, deepening colors till they hurt, while wild music swings down from stars that have turned strange and alive? Pete shouldn't have wanted that, I suppose, but he did, and probably that's why there happened to him - what did happen. And the trouble began long before the actual magic started working.(" Before I Wake.."). Henry Kuttner
3
A long time ago I lived in Lisbon, ' she said, in softly slurred Portuguese that made the name of the city Leesh-boa. 'But before that, meus neto, my tribe was in the mountains where there are only old things, like the trees and the rocks and the streams. There are truths to be learned from the old things -' She hesitated, and her brown, shrunken claw closed over Pete's hand. 'Do you know the truth, Pedrinho?'("Before I Wake.."). Henry Kuttner
4
What he'd find there, of course, was up to Pete. But he was sure there were magicians in Tampico and leopard-skins and golden thrones in Juba. Dragons and pirates and white temples where magic dwelt. And best of all, the places he didn't know about yet, the ones that would come as surprises. Oh, not entirely pleasant surprises. There should be a hint of peril, a touch of terror, to emphasize the brightness of adventure..(" Before I Wake..") . Henry Kuttner
5
Out in the stone-pile the toad squatted with its glowing jewel-eyes and, maybe, its memories. I don't know if you'll admit a toad could have memories. But I don't know, either, if you'll admit there was once witchcraft in America. Witchcraft doesn't sound sensible when you think of Pittsburgh and subways and movie houses, but the dark lore didn't start in Pittsburgh or Salem either; it goes away back to dark olive groves in Greece and dim, ancient forests in Brittany and the stone dolmens of Wales. All I'm saying, you understand, is that the toad was there, under its rocks, and inside the shack Pete was stretching on his hard bed like a cat and composing himself to sleep.(" Before I Wake..") . Henry Kuttner
6
You see, a witch has to have a familiar, some little animal like a cat or a toad. He helps her somehow. When the witch dies the familiar is suppose to die too, but sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes, if it's absorbed enough magic, it lives on. Maybe this toad found its way south from Salem, from the days when Cotton Mather was hanging witches. Or maybe Lafitte had a Creole girl who called on the Black Man in the pirate-haven of Barataria. The Gulf is full of ghosts and memories, and one of those ghosts might very well be that of a woman with warlock blood who'd come from Europe a long time ago, and died on the new continent. And possibly her familiar didn't know the way home. There's not much room for magic in America now, but once there was room.(" Before I Wake..") . Henry Kuttner