Top 17 Quotes & Sayings by Paul Gallico

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American novelist Paul Gallico.
Last updated on November 17, 2024.
Paul Gallico

Paul William Gallico was an American novelist and short story and sports writer. Many of his works were adapted for motion pictures. He is perhaps best remembered for The Snow Goose, his most critically successful book, for the novel The Poseidon Adventure, primarily through the 1972 film adaptation, and for four novels about the beloved character of Mrs. Harris.

If there is any larceny in a man, golf will bring it out.
Kittens can happen to anyone.
Nobody's a natural. You work to get good and then work to get better. It's hard to stay on top.
No game in the world is as tidy and dramatically neat as baseball, with cause and effect, crime and punishment, motive and result, so cleanly defined.
It is only when you open your veins and bleed onto the page a little that you establish contact with your reader.
You learn eventually that, while there are no villains, there are no heroes either. And until you make the final discovery that there are only human beings, who are therefore all the more fascinating, you are liable to miss something.
When two people loved each other they worked together always, two against the world, a little company. Joy was shared; trouble was split. You had an ally.
It is only when you open your veins and bleed onto the page a little that you establish contact with your reader. If you do not believe in the characters or the story you are doing at that moment with all your mind, strength, and will, if you don't feel joy and excitement while writing it, then you're wasting good white paper, even if it sells, because there are other ways in which a writer can bring in the rent money besides writing bad or phony stories.
A cat doesn't linger over making it's desires felt. — © Paul Gallico
A cat doesn't linger over making it's desires felt.
Hockey is a fast, body-contact game played by men with clubs in their hands and knives laced to their feet.
It is the custom to sneer at the modern apartment-house, television, big-city Christmas, with its commercial taint . . . office parties, artificial . . . Christmas trees . . . but future generations in search of their lost Christmases may well remember its innocence; yes, and its beauty, too.
There is the little matter of disposal of droppings in which the cat is far ahead of its rivals. The dog is somehow thrilled by what he or any of his friends have produced, hates to leave it, adores smelling it, and sometimes eats it.
Everything a cat is and does physically is to me beautiful, lovely, stimulating, soothing, attractive and an enchantment. — © Paul Gallico
Everything a cat is and does physically is to me beautiful, lovely, stimulating, soothing, attractive and an enchantment.
No one has ever been able to discover how they [cats] make this subtle sound, and what is more, no one ever will. It is a secret that has endured from the very beginning of the time of cats and will never be revealed.
No one can be as calculatedly rude as the British, which amazes Americans, who do not understand studied insult and can only offer abuse as a substitute.
If you like cats and have some, you get kittens; and if you like kittens and enjoy having them about, they grow up and you get more cats.
One is always seeking the touchstone that will dissolve one's deficiencies as a person and as a craftsman. And one is always bumping up against the fact that there is none except hard work, concentration, and continued application.
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