Top 21 Quotes & Sayings by Micah Perks

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American writer Micah Perks.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Micah Perks

Micah Perks is an American fiction writer and memoirist. Her three books, We Are Gathered Here, Pagan Time, and What Becomes Us examine the utopian impulse in U.S. history.

There are so many people who write really interesting work and try super hard and still don't get published.
I don't make fun of my characters. I just like to laugh and I think people are funny and the world is funny.
No one really wants to be laughed at. — © Micah Perks
No one really wants to be laughed at.
Nice girls are not supposed to be hungry. They are not supposed to feed themselves or care about their own food. They're definitely not supposed to take food out of a child's mouth.
Don't you think almost anything can be funny? Almost? anything.
When I was in college, I had a friend who was an artist and her theory was that all the best art in the world is funny/sad. That was her favorite genre. Funny/sad are probably my two favorite tones.
I've heard a lot of editors and agents say, "If the book is good, it will get published." I totally disagree with that.
I love ghost stories, I love to read them, and I love the idea of being haunted.
In general, I think every novel is a political novel, in that every novel is an argument about how the world works, who has power, who has a voice, what we should care about. But political novels can be boringly polemical if they end up being too black and white, too one dimensional, like war is bad, killing people is wrong.
I'm really interested in the United States, what it means to be American - maybe because my father's an immigrant and my grandparents were immigrants, and also because I grew up so isolated from mainstream life, and it was such a total shock to leave the commune and, in a way, enter America for the first time when I was eleven - so I've always felt a little like an anthropologist - like, what is this strange place I find myself in, what are the rules here?
You can hurt people's feelings if you laugh.
I know books that are really good and writers that are really good and they have become oppressed and ground down from the rejection and they stop. Either they stop writing or they have these books in their drawers. I know that for a fact.
I've always been a teaser, even as a kid.
It is radical for a woman to choose to survive and to choose to eat anything.
Writers like Twain, Whitman, Dickinson, Melville, Louise Erdrich, Toni Morrison, Russell Banks, Carolyn Chute, Alice Walker, so many others that I read coming up as a writer, that helped form my ideas of what it means to be American - and an American writer. I'm always in conversation with them.
I laugh when I'm writing. I feel like all my work is funny to me.
I think someone who writes a ghost story probably needs to believe it in some way.
My natural tendency is to fall in love with language and character and setting, and kind of forget about pacing. Narrative tension doesn't come naturally to me, and if it does feel fast-paced that makes me incredibly happy.
When the kids were growing up, I think they thought the worst thing about me being a mom is that I would laugh at them. They would say something that they thought was serious and intense and I would laugh. I thought it was funny, but they don't want to be laughed at.
It's really difficult to know what is the best way forward when you're not getting a lot of support - and probably most writers aren't getting enough support. — © Micah Perks
It's really difficult to know what is the best way forward when you're not getting a lot of support - and probably most writers aren't getting enough support.
The "we" voice is rare, and the communal impulse of the "we" is interesting to me.
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