Anna Quindlen
Anna Quindlen
Anna Marie Quindlenis an American author, journalist, and opinion columnist whose New York Times column, Public and Private, won the Pulitzer Prize for Commentary in 1992. She began her journalism career in 1974 as a reporter for the New York Post. Between 1977 and 1994 she held several posts at The New York Times...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionNon-Fiction Author
Date of Birth8 July 1952
CityPhiladelphia, PA
CountryUnited States of America
I've been a feminist since I was a teenager, but originally it was because I wanted to make the world a better place for me.
A writer is always working with whatever she's managed to store in the brainpan or puzzle out about the world.
Keeping kids safe is sometimes a delusion. The world is a perilous place. Sometimes the kitchen is a perilous place.
Reading is another thing that has made me more human by exposing me to worlds I might never have entered and people I might never meet.
There is a lot of talk now about metal detectors and gun control. Both are good things. But they are no more a solution than forks and spoons are a solution to world hunger.
We are awash in the revealed world.
These are my words; this is their world, a world in which we can wear our gender on our sleeves, unabashedly, as we go about the business of thinking out loud.
Women are the glue that holds our day-to-day world together.
the joy of someone who had been a reader all her life, whose world had been immeasurably enlarged by the words of others.
In books I have traveled, not only to other worlds but into my own. I learned who I was and who I wanted to be, what I might aspire to, and what I might dare to dream about my world and myself.
Over the last twenty years, we've changed the world just enough to make it radically different, but not enough to make it work.
It is so easty to waste our lives: our days, our hours, our minutes...It is so easy to exist instead of live.
I think that anyone who comes upon a Nautilus machine suddenly will agree with me that its prototype was clearly invented at some time in history when torture was considered a reasonable alternative to diplomacy
The truth about your own life is not always easy to accept, and sometimes hasn't even occurred to you.