Out gassing Quotes

Enjoy the best quotes on Out gassing , Explore, save & share top quotes on Out gassing .

Avoid living in new homes and working in new offices due to the high levels of chemical out-gassing that they exhibit during their first year.

Steven Magee
Save QuoteView Quote

I love metaphor the way some people love junk food. I think metaphorically, feel metaphorically, see metaphorically. And if anything in writing comes easily, comes unbidded, often unwanted, it is metaphor. Like follows as as night the day. Now most of these metaphors are bad and have to be thrown away. Who saves used Kleenex? I never have to say: "What shall I compare this to?" a summer's day? No. I have to beat the comparisons back into the holes they pour from. Some salt is savory. I live in a sea.

william gass
Save QuoteView Quote

In general, I would think that at present prose writers are much in advance of the poets. In the old days, I read more poetry than prose, but now it is in prose where you find things being put together well, where there is great ambition, and equal talent. Poets have gotten so careless, it is a disgrace. You can’t pick up a page. All the words slide off.

William H. Gass
Save QuoteView Quote

When book and reader's furrowed brow meet, it isn't always the book that's stupid.

William H. Gass
Save QuoteView Quote

If someone asks me, “Why do you write?” I can reply by pointing out that it is a very dumb question. Nevertheless, there is an answer. I write because I hate. A lot. Hard. And if someone asks me the inevitable next dumb question, “Why do you write the way you do?” I must answer that I wish to make my hatred acceptable because my hatred is much of me, if not the best part. Writing is a way of making the writer acceptable to the world—every cheap, dumb, nasty thought, every despicable desire, every noble sentiment, every expensive taste.

William H. Gass
Save QuoteView Quote

They try to thrive. To multiply. To make murder a method of management.

William H. Gass
Save QuoteView Quote

Excellence is inconveniently difficult.

William H. Gass
Save QuoteView Quote

Language is not the lowborn, gawky servant of thought and feeling; it is need, thought, feeling, and perception itself. The shape of sentences, the song in its syllables, the rhythm of its movement, is the movement of the imagination.

William H. Gass
Save QuoteView Quote

Fiction becomes visual by becoming verbal

William H. Gass
Save QuoteView Quote

So to the wretched writer I should like to say that there’s one body only whose request for your caresses is not vulgar, is not unchaste, untoward, or impolite: the body of your work itself; for you must remember that your attentions will not merely celebrate a beauty but create one; that yours is love that brings it own birth with it, just as Plato has declared, and that you should therefore give up the blue things of this world in favor of the words which say them

William H. Gass
Save QuoteView Quote