Top 6 Quotes & Sayings by Shirley Ann Grau

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American fictioneer Shirley Ann Grau.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Shirley Ann Grau

Shirley Ann Grau was an American writer. Born in New Orleans, she lived part of her childhood in Montgomery, Alabama. Her novels are set primarily in the Deep South and explore issues of race and gender. In 1965 she won the Pulitzer Prize for Literature for her novel The Keepers of the House, set in a fictional Alabama town.

Me? What am I? Nothing. The legs on which dinner comes to the table, the arms by which cocktails enter the living room, the hands that drive cars. I am the eyes that see nothing, the ears that don't hear. I'm invisible too. They look and don't see me. When they move, I have to guess their direction and get myself out of the way.
Haven't you ever noticed how highways always get beautiful near the state capital?
In brief, I spend half my time trying to learn the secrets of other writers - to apply them to the expression of my own thoughts. — © Shirley Ann Grau
In brief, I spend half my time trying to learn the secrets of other writers - to apply them to the expression of my own thoughts.
Oak trees come out of acorns, no matter how unlikely that seems. An acorn is just a tree's way back into the ground. For another try. Another trip through. One life for another.
At the end of a marriage it is difficult to recall the beginning.
One of my current pet theories is that the winter is a kind of evangelist, more subtle than Billy Graham, of course, but of the same stuff.
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