5 Quotes & Sayings By James Wood

James Wood is the author of The Dream of Reason, The Nearest Thing to Life, The Hidden Power of Art, How Fiction Works, How Fiction Feeds Us, On Beauty, On Truth, Why We Love Art, The Magic of Reality, On Thinking Well, On Being Ill, and On Losing Senses. His most recent book is How Fiction Feeds Us (Harvard University Press). James Wood received his Ph.D. in Philosophy from Yale University and was an NSF fellow at Harvard University.

1
Convention itself, like metaphor itself, is not dead; but it is always dying. James Wood
2
Narrative secrets are not the same as human mysteries, a lesson that novelists seem fates to forget, again and again; the former quickly confess themselves, and fall silent, while the true mysteries go on speaking. James Wood
3
The vitality of literary character has less to do with dramatic action, novelistic coherence, and even plain plausibility–let alone likeability–than with a larger philosophical or metaphysical sense, our awareness that a character’s actions are deeply important, that something profound is at stake, with the author brooding over the face of that character like God over the face of the waters. James Wood
4
Publishers, readers, booksellers, even critics, acclaim the novel that one can deliciously sink into, forget oneself in, the novel that returns us to the innocence of childhood or the dream of the cartoon, the novel of a thousand confections and no unwanted significance. What becomes harder to find, and lonelier to defend, is the idea of the novel as–in Ford Madox Ford’s words–a “medium of profoundly serious investigation into the human case. James Wood