January/February 2000
By Staff, Utne Reader
IT DEPENDS ON the person, but I think you'd be better off falling in love [than taking a writing class], you'd be better off getting rejected by someone, sidling up to a woman and saying, 'How 'bout it, baby?' and she saying, 'Fuck off.' These are valuable experiences!
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--Frank McCourt, author,
Poets and Writers (Sept./Oct. 1999)
"I SEE MYSELF as a pirate, plundering and smuggling back to women that which has been stolen from us. But it hasn't simply been stolen; it's been stolen and reversed. For example, the Christian trinity is the triple goddess reversed. The trinity is aptly described as a closed triangle. It doesn't go anywhere."
-- Mary Daly, feminist theorist, What Is Enlightenment? (Fall/Winter 1999)
"THE WAYS IN WHICH people are damaged are the ways in which they're strong. It's what makes people interesting--what they've overcome and how, and what they haven't and how that's become a good thing. Almost everyone's life is both a gorgeous story and a tragedy. I think being alive is really, really hard, and I'm constantly stunned and amazed by people who make it interesting and beautiful."
--Sarah Polley, actor, Interview (Sept. 1999)
"POVERTY IS NOT the problem. Wealth is the problem. Poverty is the solution."
--Satish Kumar, author, publisher, activist, Resurgence (Sept./Oct. 1999)
"YOU KNOW HOW Winston Churchill called his depression 'my black dog'? Well that's how I think of my insomnia--it's like some big, unmanageable Labrador retriever that . . . knocks you over in its one-sided ardor and can't be made to mind no matter how savagely you beat it or how tenderly you whisper into the velvet flap of its ear. That damn dog comes around at least three nights a week."
--Ayun Halliday, editor, East Village Inky (#2)