A Quote by Joan Didion

I hadn't thought that I was generally a pack rat, but it turns out I am. — © Joan Didion
I hadn't thought that I was generally a pack rat, but it turns out I am.
There's a lot in my closet. I've been collecting things since I was five. I'm definitely a pack rat. I'm not a hoarder, but I'm definitely a pack rat. I will keep anything if I have a memory in it or a good moment.
Back in the Rat Pack days, we'd take Frank's plane and sit dead center, because of Nancy. We'd watch the Rat Pack in the center ring and you couldn't ask for a better thing.
My mom is a pack rat.
I live like a crazy old pack rat.
I loved to party with the Rat Pack; they were so much fun.
It was at one of the parties at our house that The Rat Pack got started.
The Rat Pack was the piece that really kicked me out of that little funk that I was in and then Ted called me up and asked me if I wanted to be the dad in Blow.
I was so enthralled watching 'Guys and Dolls' and learning about the Rat Pack.
I don't believe in luck. When I am diligent, my luck is generally good. When I am lax, my invariable turns bad.
I have a very varied taste in music. Everything from rap to classical to Latino to Rat Pack to jazz.
I'm a pack rat. There's only a couple pairs of tights I've worn throughout my career that I don't have. I save everything.
I'm a selective pack rat. There's some things I have no problem getting rid of and others I hold onto dearly.
I'm fascinated by the narrative of geology, and I'm a veritable pack rat of a collector on the road. I keep a rock hammer in my car.
People say never work with children and animals. I actually like working with Oliver Bell, and working with a rat really opens possibilities to you because you don't know how it's going to be. It's just a rat, so you can just react to this rat being a rat, if that makes sense.
When I went to college, I lived on campus, and the guys I hung out with made the characters in Revenge of the Nerds look like the Rat Pack in 1962. I, myself made that kid Booger look like Remington Steele.
Beginning a poem, the poet as a rule doesn't know the way it's going to come out, and at times, he is very surprised by the way it turns out, since often it turns out better than he expected; often his thought carries further than he reckoned.
This site uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. More info...
Got it!