“Change, when it comes, cracks everything open.”
Dorothy Allison“Change, when it comes, cracks everything open.”
Dorothy Allison“If you just go get one of these little fine arts degrees or writing program degrees, it never forces you to confront your responsibility as narrator, whereas any of the social sciences make you at look the interaction between the storyteller and story. Hurston understood that. But then she and I write out of despised cultures that on some level we feel we're defending.”
Dorothy Allison“Everything I know, everything I put in my fiction, will hurt someone somewhere as surely as it will comfort and enlighten someone else. What then is my responsibility? What am I to restrain? What am I to fear and alter--my own nakedness or the grief of the reader? I want my stories to be so good they are unforgettable; to make my ideas live and my own terrors real for people I will never meet. It is a completely amoral writer's lust. If we begin to agree that some ideas are too dangerous, too bad to invite inside our heads, then we stop the storyteller completely. We silence everyone who would tell us something that might be painful in our vulnerable moments.”
Dorothy Allison“I want hard stories, I demand them from myself. Hard stories are worth the difficulty. It seems to me the only way I have forgiven anything, understood anything, is through that process of opening up to my own terror and pain and reexamining it, re-creating it in the story, and making it something different, making it meaningful - even if the meaning is only in the act of the telling.”
Dorothy Allison“Women lose their lives not knowing they can do something different..." from Two or Three Things i Know For Sure”
Dorothy Allison“Write to your fear.”
Dorothy Allison“Can a book make such a difference? Can it change you utterly?I know it can.(First essay from The Book That Changed My Life, edited by Roxanne J. Coady & Joy Johannessen)”
Dorothy Allison (Author)“Twenty years after we had left so fierce and proud, we were all right back where we had started, yoked to each other and the same old drama.”
Dorothy Allison, Trash: Stories“Piece by piece, my mother is being stolen from me.”
Dorothy Allison, Trash: Stories“I made my life, the same way it looks like you're gonna make yours—out of pride and stubbornness and too much anger. You better think hard, Ruth Anne, about what you want and who you're mad at. You better think hard.”
Dorothy Allison, Bastard Out of Carolina