19 Quotes & Sayings By Tobias Wolff

Tobias Wolff is the author of six novels: The Barracks Thief, The Twenty-Seventh Man, In Pharaoh's Army, This Boy's Life, Old School, and The Twenty-Seventh Man. His work has been adapted into a feature film for HBO starring Robert De Niro, Sean Penn, Owen Wilson, and Kate Winslet. Wolff's most recent novel is In Pharaoh's Army. He has twice been a finalist for the National Book Award and has received a Guggenheim fellowship Read more

His memoir This Boy's Life was a finalist for the National Book Award and won the National Book Critics Circle Award. Wolff lives in New York City with his wife and two children.

The beauty of a fragment is that it still supports...
1
The beauty of a fragment is that it still supports the hope of brilliant completeness. Tobias Wolff
I'm a survivor,
2
I'm a survivor, " I said. But I didn't think that claim would carry much weight in an obituary. Tobias Wolff
A true piece of writing is a dangerous thing. It...
3
A true piece of writing is a dangerous thing. It can change your life. Tobias Wolff
4
There are very few professions in which people just sit down and think hard for five or six hours a day all by themselves. Of course it's why you want to become a writer – because you have the liberty to do that, but once you have the liberty you also have the obligation to do it. Tobias Wolff
5
In the very act of writing I felt pleased with what I did. There was the pleasure of having words come to me, and the pleasure of ordering them, re-ordering them, weighing one against another. Pleasure also in the imagination of the story, the feeling that it could mean something. Mostly I was glad to find out that I could write at all. In writing you work toward a result you won't see for years, and can't be sure you'll ever see. It takes stamina and self-mastery and faith. It demands those things of you, then gives them back with a little extra, a surprise to keep you coming. It toughens you and clears your head. I could feel it happening. I was saving my life with every word I wrote, and I knew it. . Tobias Wolff
6
The human heart is a dark forest Tobias Wolff
7
Say you've just read Faulkner's 'Barn Burning'. Like the son in the story, you've sensed the faults in your father's character. Thinking about them makes you uncomfortable, left alone you'd probably close the book and move on to other thoughts. But instead you are taken in hand by a tall, brooding man with a distinguished limp who involves you and a roomful of other boys in the consideration of what it means to be a son. The loyalty that is your duty and your worth and your problem. The goodness of loyalty and its difficulties and snares, how loyalty might also become betrayal - of the self and the world outside the circle of blood. You've never had this conversation before, not with anyone. And even as its happening you understand that just as your father's troubles with the world - emotional frailty, self-doubt, incomplete honesty - will not lead him to set it on fire, your own loyalty will never be the stuff of tragedy. You will not turn bravely and painfully from your father, as the boy in the story does, but foresake him, without regret. And as you accept that separation, it seems to happen; your father's sad, fleshy face grows vague, and you blink it away and look up to where your teachers leans against his desk, one hand in a coat pocket, the other rubbing his bum knee as he listens desolately to the clever bore behind you saying something about bird imagery. . Tobias Wolff
8
I had never seen such sorrow; it appalled me. And I was even more appalled by her attempts to overcome it, because they so plainly, pathetically failed and in failing opened up a view of the world I had only begun to suspect, where wounds did not heal, and things did not work out for the best Tobias Wolff
9
I've allowed some of these points to stand, because this is a book of memory, and memory has its own story to tell. But I have done my best to make it tell a truthful story. Tobias Wolff
10
Why were Jack and his brother digging post holes? A fence there would run parallel to the one that already enclosed the farmyard. The Welches had no animals to keep in or out - a fence there could serve no purpose. Their work was pointless. Years later, while I was waiting for a boat to take me across the river, I watched two Vietnamese women methodically hitting a discarded truck tire with sticks. They did it for a good long while, and were still doing it when I crossed the river. They were part of the dream from which I recognized the Welches, my defeat-dream, my damnation-dream, with its solemn choreography of earnest useless acts. Tobias Wolff
11
Knowing that everything comes to an end is a gift of experience, a consolation gift for knowing that we ourselves are coming to an end. Before we get it we live in a continuous present, and imagine the future as more of that present. Happiness is endless happiness, innocent of its own sure passing. Pain is endless pain. Tobias Wolff
12
And I learned that it's a bad idea to curse if you're in trouble, but a good idea to sing, if you can. Tobias Wolff
13
Had he learned nothing from all those years of teaching Hawthorne? Through story after story he’d led his boys to consider the folly of obsession with purity — its roots sunk deep in pride, flowering condemnation and violence against others and self. Tobias Wolff
14
In a world where the most consequential things happen by chance, or from unfathomable causes, you don't look to reason for help. You consort with mysteries.. They have been killed in place of you - in your place. You don't think it out, not at the time, not in those terms, but you can't help but feel it, and go on feeling it. It's the close call you have to keep escaping from, the unending doubt that you have a right to your own life. It's the corruption suffered by everyone who lives on, that henceforth they must wonder at the reason and probe its justice. Tobias Wolff
15
We are made to persist.that's how we find out who we are. Tobias Wolff
16
I recognized no obstacle to miraculous change but the incredulity of others. This was an idea that died hard, if it ever really died at all. Tobias Wolff
17
Real maturity is the ability to imagine the humanity of every person as fully as you believe in your own humanity. Tobias Wolff
18
I teach one semester a year, and this year I'm just teaching one course during that semester, a writing workshop for older students in their late 20s and early 30s, people in our graduate program who are already working on a manuscript and trying to bring it to completion. Tobias Wolff