13 Quotes & Sayings By Tom Bissell

Born in Rock Hill, South Carolina, Tom Bissell grew up in a series of small towns in the South. He is a graduate of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill and received a master's degree from Columbia University. His work has been published in Granta, Harper's, The New York Times Magazine, and The Atlantic Monthly. He lives in New York City.

A great writer reveals the truth even when he or...
1
A great writer reveals the truth even when he or she does not wish to. Tom Bissell
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In the emergency of growing up, we all need heroes. But the father I grew up with was no hero to me, not then. He was too wounded in the head, too endlessly and terribly sad. Too funny, too explosive, too confusing. Heroes are uncomplicated. *This* makes them do *that*… But the war does not make sense. War senselessly wounds everyone right down the line. A body bag fits more than just its intended corpse. Take the 58, 000 American soldiers lost in Vietnam and multiply by four, five, six–and only then does one begin to realize the damage this war has done… War when necessary, is unspeakable. When unnecessary, it is unforgivable. It is not an occasion for heroism. It is an occasion only for survival and death. To regard war in any other way only guarantees its inevitable reappearance. . Tom Bissell
3
I could imagine a hot day. I could imagine a number of curious people spontaneously following a young man of great wisdom, a young man rumored to wield power over the mysterious afflictions they saw every day in their villages. They are not sure where they are going, and once the young man stops to speak, they find themselves on the other side of the Sea of Galilee, the nearest town now very far away. Many are feeling hunger pangs, uncertain of why they have come so far. What will they do? One of the young man's friends arrives, unexpectedly bearing food. The people are happy and relieved, and among them talk circulates of the surprising tenderness with which the wise young man hands out victuals to the people, few of whom he knows well. Eventually, the story is written down. Years go by, then decades, and in this time the crowd increases from fifty to five hundred to five thousand. The unexpected arrival of the follower bearing food vanishes from the telling. An event experienced by its participants in miraculous terms is transformed into a miraculous story. The core of the story remains the same: the hungry were fed when they were not expecting to be, and the young man who fed them do so of his own volition. You could base a code of ethics on a single act of unexpected munificence, and perhaps even fashion from it a crude if supple morality, but you would not have a cosmology, or anything close to one, and cosmologies were what most people craved. Tom Bissell
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An artist can respect the backfield of fact before which every human being stands and choose not to address those facts. Tom Bissell
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Reading gives one something to think about other than one's self. Tom Bissell
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Most non-readers are nothing but an agglomeration of third-hand opinion and blindly received wisdom. Tom Bissell
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Of that time, there is still much we do not know. Tom Bissell
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We are no longer worried that children are missing school because of video games, though. We are worried that they are murdering their classmates because of video games. Tom Bissell
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I think the highest purpose of fiction is to show that all people are fundamentally worthy of mercy. Tom Bissell
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And so, my beloved Kermit, my dear little Hussein, at the moment America changed forever, your father was wandering an ICBM-denuded watseland, nervously monitoring his radiation level, armed only with a baseball bat, a 10mm pistol, and six rounds of ammunition, in search of a vicious gang of mohawked marauders who were 100 percent bad news and totally had to be dealth with. Trust Daddy on this one. Tom Bissell
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Fun is not the same thing as fulfillment. Tom Bissell
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Sport-based video games occupy an odd space within the sphere of modern home entertainment. Reliably enjoyed by millions, the sport-based video game stands at what sometimes feels like an oblique angle from the larger medium, and in ways that can be hard to articulate. Tom Bissell