Top 25 Quotes & Sayings by Andrei Codrescu

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American novelist Andrei Codrescu.
Last updated on November 5, 2024.
Andrei Codrescu

Andrei Codrescu is a Romanian-born American poet, novelist, essayist, screenwriter, and commentator for National Public Radio. He is the winner of the Peabody Award for his film Road Scholar and the Ovid Prize for poetry. He was Mac Curdy Distinguished Professor of English at Louisiana State University from 1984 until his retirement in 2009.

Even the greatest poets can't express tragedy in a way that is larger than their immediate circumstances.
Most artists don't get paid for what they do, and they are lucky if they can persuade a friend to let them show something at a kid's birthday party.
New Orleans reminds me of Romania because New Orleans is very corrupt politically. — © Andrei Codrescu
New Orleans reminds me of Romania because New Orleans is very corrupt politically.
There is a slight problem with being a conceptual artist these days: You won't get paid. But this levels the field and takes the art of money out of the field of serious art. The only conceptual artists who would conceive of making money on the Internet are a lowbrow species known as hustlers.
After so many years, I feel more American than anything else, but I'm also Romanian and whatever other oddities of temperament I picked up elsewhere, in Transylvania or France, for instance. These days, everybody is both an exile and a resident - they don't call it the global village for nothing.
Real artists free of the tedium of money can use, now, all of society as an idea factory.
My mother and I were part of a deal in the mid-'60s between Romania and Israel. Israel bought freedom for Romanian Jews for $2,000 a head. Ceausescu made a bundle in hard currency. He also 'sold' ethnic Germans to West Germany. Instead of going to Israel, my mother and I came to the United States.
Americans are accustomed to welcoming, or at least receiving, refugees from other countries, not creating our own.
Romanians have a particular love for poetry and have a beautiful, vivid language. The poets they love are not versifiers like Vadim Tudor, but genuinely complex mystical souls like Mircea Cartarescu.
Romanians are culturally European, very close to the French. Socially, they are now building a society that is emotionally closer to the Balkans, Turkey and Greece.
The peasants of all lands recognize power and they salute it, whether it's good or evil.
The worst part about zombies raging unchecked is the slow paralysis that they induce in people who aren't quite zombies yet. The rest of us un-zombies turn our heads, hoping the ghouls will just go away.
How did you fall in love with New Orleans? At once, madly. Looking back, sometimes I think it was predestined.
Nostalgia is masochism and masochism is something masochists love to share.
Cookbooks bear the same relation to real books that microwave food bears to your grandmother?s.
Only the poor can create art.
The time has come for writers to become inaccessible again. The reason is not some kind of 'mystique' that makes people curious (though it helps), but the fact that no real writers ever lay down anything real in public-they work in solitude, they think hard, and their thoughts are rarely nice or 'friendly.'
The evaporation of 4 million who believe in this crap would leave the world a better place.
In the grand collage that is Dada, past and future are equally usable.
There is a velvety sensuality here at the mouth of the Mississippi that you won't find anywhere else. Tell me what the air feels like at 3 AM on a Thursday night in late August in Shaker Heights, and I bet that you won't be able to say because nobody stays up that late. But in New Orleans, I'll tell you, it's like ink and honey passed through silver moonlight.
It is the job of the market to turn the base material of our emotions into gold. — © Andrei Codrescu
It is the job of the market to turn the base material of our emotions into gold.
There is no ´Complete Idiots Guide to Creationism,´ but perhaps one is not needed.
These are the poems of a traveler and a lover who feels both the terror of time passing and the consolation of eternity. From such tension spring lovely poetic objects, ready for intelligent use.
It's still a mystery to me exactly how I learned the language. [But] I was 19 years old and I had very urgent things to tell girls.
The real technology -behind all our other technologies- is language. It actually creates the world our consciousness lives in.
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