12 Quotes & Sayings By Mark Vonnegut

Mark Vonnegut was born in Chicago in 1948. He graduated from Yale University in 1970 and the University of Iowa Writers Workshop in 1977. His first novel, The Eden Express, was published in 1979. He is the author of six other novels, including Palm Sunday, Hocus Pocus, Galapagos, and The Eden Express Read more

He has also written three books for children, including the critically acclaimed Mother Night, which was made into a film starring Sigourney Weaver and Ralph Fiennes. Mark Vonnegut's autobiographical works include Jailbird (1981) and Oh, What a Paradise It Seems (1989). His most recent novel is God Bless You, Dr.

Kevorkian (2001). Mark Vonnegut currently lives with his wife in New York City.

Reading and writing are in themselves subversive acts. What they...
1
Reading and writing are in themselves subversive acts. What they subvert is the notion that things have to be the way they are, that you are alone, that no one has ever felt the way you have. Mark Vonnegut
Writing was a spiritual exercise for my father, the only...
2
Writing was a spiritual exercise for my father, the only thing he really believed in. Mark Vonnegut
3
Fear that I was very different from everyone else. Fear that deep down inside I was a shallow fraud, that after the revolution or after Jesus came down to straighten everything out, everyone from hippies to hard-hats would unfold and blossom into the beautiful people they were while I would remain a gnarled little wart in the corner, oozing bile and giving off putrid smells. Mark Vonnegut
I’m subject to occasional theological nightmares. The one that leaves...
4
I’m subject to occasional theological nightmares. The one that leaves me in a cold sweat every time is, I arrive at the pearly gates and the first thing I’m asked is where I went to college. Mark Vonnegut
5
The way I played music there was the way I wanted to farm, chop wood, cook, make love, raise children. Everything. A lo of it had to do with things I felt while I played. If only I could feel that sense of total absorption in what I was doing when I was doing other things. It was more than absorption, it was spontaneity, competence, a sense of grace and playfulness, of being in touch with an inexhaustible source of energy and beauty. Mark Vonnegut
6
What occurs to people when they read Kurt [Vonnegut] is that things are much more up for grabs than they thought they were. The world is a slightly different place just because they read a damn book. Imagine that. Mark Vonnegut
7
It's regrets that make painful memories. When I was crazy I did everything just right. Mark Vonnegut
8
After my first few tastes I was pretty much hooked. I'd have dry spells, months without any or only piddling amounts of grace, but I never forgot about it or stopped wanting it. Mark Vonnegut
9
Having their feelings make sense is how people get their kicks. Mark Vonnegut
10
In a funny way it's almost fun, having everything be so fucked up and managing to adjust. I guess you might say I'm proud. Proud of me, proud of my friends for managing to deal with this thing so well. For most people this would be the end of the world. They'd panic, their friends would panic. Things would get trampled in the stampede. But we've kept our heads, made the necessary allowances, ad can just ride this thing out. I'm pretty much just putting in time waiting for this cloud to blow over. Waiting for something to come along to make some sense out of all this. Killing time, waiting for some sort of cavalry to come over the hill. There's really not an awful lot I can do but wait. As long as there's no panic, we can hold out for damn near forever. Mark Vonnegut
11
At the end of his life, which had included financial ruin in the Great Depression, his wife's barbiturate addiction and death by overdose, and then his own lung cancer, Doc said, "It was enough to have been a unicorn." What he meant was that he got to do art. It was magic to him that his hands and mind got to make wonderful things, that he didn't have to be just another goat or horse. Mark Vonnegut