Quotes From "The World According To Garp" By John Irving

In this dirty minded world, you are either someone's wife...
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In this dirty minded world, you are either someone's wife or someone's whore. And if you're not either people think there is something wrong with you....but there is nothing wrong with me John Irving
In the world according to Garp, we are all terminal...
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In the world according to Garp, we are all terminal cases John Irving
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When (The World According To) Garp was published, people who’d lost children wrote to me. ‘’I lost one, too, ’’ they told me. I confessed to them that I hadn’t lost any children. I’m just a father with a good imagination. In my imagination, I lose my children every day. (afterword) John Irving
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Life, " Garp wrote, "is sadly not structured like a good old-fashioned novel. Instead an end occurs when those who are meant to peter out have petered out. All that is left is memory. But even a nihilist has memory. John Irving
In a school community, someone who reads a book for...
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In a school community, someone who reads a book for some secretive purpose, other than discussing it, is strange. What was she reading for? John Irving
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Well, you finally got me, " Helen had whispered to him, tearfully, but Garp had sprawled there, on his back on the wrestling mat, wondering who had gotten whom. John Irving
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She felt if she ever had children she would love them no less when they were twenty than when they were two; they might need you more at twenty, she thought. What do you really need when you're two? In the hospital, the babies were the easiest patients. The older they got, the more they needed; and the less anyone wanted or loved them. John Irving
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Garp didn't want a daughter because of men. Because of bad men, certainly; but even, he thought, because of men like me. John Irving
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As Garp put it, 'You only grow by coming to the end of something and by beginning something else.' Even if these so-called endings and beginnings are illusions. John Irving
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They were involved in that awkward procedure of getting to unknow each other. John Irving
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...nearly everything seems a letdown after a writer has finished writing something. John Irving
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...the demands of writing and of real life are not always similar. John Irving
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Unlike Alice, Garp was a real writer –not because he wrote more beautifully than she wrote but because he knew what every artist should know: as Garp put it, 'You only grow by coming to the end of something and by beginning something else.' Even if these so-called endings and beginnings are illusions. Garp did not write faster than anyone else, or more; he simply always worked with the idea of completion in mind. John Irving
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Crazy people made him crazy. It was as if he personally resented them giving into madness - in part, because he so frequently labored to behave sanely. When some people gave up the labor of sanity, or failed at it, Garp suspected them of not trying hard enough. John Irving
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As for Jenny, she felt only that women - just like men - should at least be able to make conscious decisions about the course of their lives; if that made her a feminist, she said, then she guessed she was one. John Irving