8 Quotes & Sayings By Sarah Manguso

Sarah Manguso was born in the United States, but has lived most of her life in Melbourne, Australia. She is a 2004 graduate of Stanford University and a former staff writer at the Seattle Review of Books. In 2008 she became a full-time writer, and her writing has been published in The New Yorker. Her work has been anthologized in Best American Nonrequired Reading, The Best American Essays 2008, and The Best Australian Stories 2008 Read more

Her first book is The Dream of a Good Death: Writers on Their Own Mortality, a collection of essays from writers as diverse as John Ashbery, David Foster Wallace, and Glen David Gold.

1
Chair or no chair: a binary relation. But the vicissitudes of moving the body around are infinite. You never know what a person in a chair can do. Sarah Manguso
2
I read obituaries every day to learn what sorts of lives are available to us, to see an entire life compressed into a few column inches, to fit the whole story in my eye at once. Sarah Manguso
3
Today was very full, but the problem isn't today. It's tomorrow. I'd be able to recover from today if it weren't for tomorrow. There should be extra days, buffer days, between real days. Sarah Manguso
4
To write a diary is to make a series of choices about what to omit, what to forget. A memorable sandwich, an unmemorable flight of stairs. A memorable bit of conversation surrounded by chatter that no one records. Sarah Manguso
5
My students still don't know what they will never be. Their hope is so bright I can almost see it. I used to value the truth of whether this student or that one would achieve the desired thing. I don't value that truth anymore as much as I value their untested hope. I don't care that one in two hundred of them will ever become what they feel they must become. I care only that I am able to witness their faith in what's coming next. I no longer believe in anything other than the middle, but my students still believe in beginnings. Ask them, and they will tell you that everything is about to start in just a moment, just one more moment. Sarah Manguso
6
In my experience nursing is waiting. The mother becomes the background against which the baby lives, becomes time. I used to exist against the continuity of time. Then I became the baby's continuity, a background of ongoing time for him to live against. I was the warmth and milk that was always there for him, the agent of comfort that was always there for him. My body, my life, became the landscape of my son's life. I am no longer merely a thing living in the world; I am a world. . Sarah Manguso
7
I used to be twenty. Then I was twenty-one, twenty-two, and so on. And then I became a mother and could no longer even distinguish the difference between twenty-one and twenty-two or the difference between thirty-eight and thirty-nine. Sarah Manguso