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Alexander Theroux

Read through the most famous quotes from Alexander Theroux




Will I have to use a dictionary to read your book?" asked Mrs. Dodypol. "It depends," says I, "how much you used the dictionary before you read it.


— Alexander Theroux


#humor #humour #literature #reading #vocabulary

Ordinary persons, he said, smiling, found no differences between men. The artist found them all.


— Alexander Theroux


#men

The man who has faith in logic is always cuckolded by reality.


— Alexander Theroux


#logic #man #faith

Faculty Meetings are held whenever the need to show off is combined with the imperative of accomplishing nothing.


— Alexander Theroux


#funny

...we are willing to lose ourselves in another as we exchange fates with one whom we love but on whom our heart is nevertheless impaled.


— Alexander Theroux


#love

Hypocrisy is the essence of snobbery, but all snobbery is about the problem of belonging.


— Alexander Theroux


#belonging #essence #hypocrisy #problem #snobbery

Silence is the unbearable repartee.


— Alexander Theroux


#silence #unbearable

There is no loneliness like that of a failed marriage.


— Alexander Theroux


#like #loneliness #marriage

Artists are never complete people. But if it's art that completes them, then what is taken away?


— Alexander Theroux


#artists #away #complete #completes #never

Being natural is one of the most irritating poses I know in people.


— Alexander Theroux


#i #irritating #know #most #natural






About Alexander Theroux






Did you know about Alexander Theroux?

He is the brother of novelist Paul Theroux. Alexander Louis Theroux (born 1939) is an American novelist and poet whose best known novel is perhaps Darconville’s Cat (1982) which was selected by Anthony Burgess’s Ninety-Nine Novels: The Best in English since 1939—A Personal Choice in 1984 and in Larry McCaffery’s 20th Century’s Greatest Hits He was awarded the Lannan Literary Award for Fiction in 1991 and the Clifton Fadiman Medal for Fiction in 2002 by the Mercantile Library in New York City.

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