“What hasty preperations we make for our future. Think of it: it seems almost tragic, the things we’re sure we ought to bring along. We pack too heavy with what we hope we’ll use, and too light of what we must. We thus go forth misladen, ill equipped for the dawn.”
Chang-rae Lee“I often think that the prime directive for me as a teacher of writing is akin to that for a physician, which is this: do no harm.”
Chang-Rae Lee“It’s perhaps more laudable to simply keep heading out into the world, than always tilting to leave one’s mark on it.”
Chang-rae Lee“Does any program really improve anybody, as much as simply identifying them? And, after identifying them, not ruining them?”
Chang-rae Lee“It was in the work that she came closest to finding herself, by which we don’t mean gaining “self-knowledge” or understanding one’s “true nature” but rather how at some point you can see most plainly that this is what you do, this is how you fit in the wider ecology”
Chang-rae Lee“Does any (MFA) program really improve anybody, as much as simply identifying them? And, after identifying them, not ruining them?”
Chang-rae Lee, On Such a Full Sea“It was in the work that she came closest to finding herself, by which we don’t mean gaining “self-knowledge” or understanding one’s “true nature” but rather how at some point you can see most plainly that this is what you do, this is how you fit in the wider ecology.”
Chang-rae Lee, On Such a Full Sea“He should have had more faith in himself rather than give in to his weaker qualities, in particular his overeagerness to please and aversion to conflict and a lifelong infatuation with hope, which had him dreaming more than doing”
Chang-rae Lee, On Such a Full Sea“Our tainted world looms within us, every one.”
Chang-rae Lee, On Such a Full Sea“In this difficult era the most valuable commodity is the unfailing turn of the hours and how they retrieve for us the known harbor of yesterday.”
Chang-rae Lee, On Such a Full Sea“For at some point, each of us will be asked to embody what we feel and know.”
Chang-rae Lee, On Such a Full Sea