"Saroyan's output from 1934 to 1940 established his reputation. What enthralled critics and readers was the brashness and certainty of his daring: Beginning with his first collection of linked short stories β written in 30 days, a story each day β and mailed off to Whit Burnett at Story Magazine. This was a new, fresh, exuberant kind of writing, intensely personal, prose poems which departed from customary narrative structures and sauntered elliptically with the awe of a young man fully realizing the most self-evident of truths: himself, alive upon the earth. β¦ My recollection of those first Saroyan stories is typical: watching his language mesh the spiritual hunger and the actual physical hunger of the penniless main character was to be in the presence of a breathtaking act of creation. Hope and possibility were mandatory components to the human comedy as Saroyan viewed it. Accepting madness as the only constant in the universe never precluded joy and laughter. Cynicism had no place in the way one approached each day. Whimsy, compassion, a ready smile and the gift of interior and exterior motion were to be the tools."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Pulitzer Prize winnersHumanistsPlaywrights from the United StatesNovelists from CaliforniaNovelists from Armenia
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
John Hutchison in "Across the Board on Tomorrow Morning" first published in the San Francisco Flier (30 May 1996)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/William_Saroyan
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
William Saroyan
William Saroyan (31 August 1908 β 18 May 1981) was an Armenian American author, famous for his novel The Human Comedy (1943) and other works dealing with the comedies and tragedies of everyday existence.
193 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by William Saroyan β
Related Quotes
"All things lie dark in possibility."
"Genius is play, and man's capacity for achieving genius is infinite, and many may achieve genius only through play."
"All I can do is write my stories for mankind, and rest easy."
"I was a little afraid of him; not the boy himself, but of what he seemed to be: the victim of the world."
"He was just a young man who'd come to town on a donkey, bored to death or something, who'd taken advantage of the chaβ¦"
"Indians are born with an instinct for riding, rowing, hunting, fishing, and swimming. Americans are born with an instβ¦"
"The race was over. I was last, by ten yards. Without the slightest hesitation I protested and challenged the runners β¦"
"There is little pride in writers. They know they are human and shall some day die and be forgotten. Knowing all this β¦"
"It is impossible not to notice that our world is tormented by failure, hate, guilt, and fear."
"A man's ethnic identity has more to do with a personal awareness than with geography."