“’The Outsiders’ cast in particular was a joy to be around – sweet kids, normal goofy teenagers off camera and serious artists on. They were great. I never got them mixed up with the characters, though. Each of them had his own strong personality.”
“I always try to write the best I can.”
“I think that ‘The Outsiders’ was meant to be written, and I was just picked to write it.”
“I grew up with my cousins, who were as close as brothers, and frankly, I didn’t like what girls were expected to do. I liked horseback riding, playing football, going to rodeos. I wanted to be in jeans all the time, and I couldn’t figure out why I was supposed to conform to a certain standard, so I didn’t.”
“Since I am first of all a character writer, that character’s emotions are as vivid to me as my own. I always begin with an emotion after I have established a character in my mind. I feel what they feel. I guess that is why it comes across so strongly.”
“When I stepped out into the bright sunlight from the darkness of the movie house, I had only two things on my mind: Paul Newman and a ride home.”
“My characters are fictional. I get ideas from real people, sometimes, but my characters always exist only in my head.”
“If you enjoy reading something, read it.”
“I was a ‘young adult’ when I wrote ‘The Outsiders,’ although it was not a genre at the time. It’s an interesting time of life to write about, when your ideals get slammed up against reality, and you must compromise.”
“I have no idea why I write. The old standards are: I like to express my feelings, stretch my imagination, earn money.”
“My goal from being a child was to have a happy home life.”
“I go straight from thinking about my narrator to being him.”
“My mother was physically and emotionally abusive. My father was an extremely cold man.”
“I could write and help a lot of kids, or teach and help a few and go nuts.”
“I was a tomboy and most of my close friends were male.”
“Any writer who gives a reader a pleasurable experience is doing every other writer a favor because it will make the reader want to read other books. I am all for it.”
“When I was in high school, the genders were so separate from each other. If you weren’t ‘dating’ somebody, you couldn’t just be friends with somebody.”
“When I see a movie with someone it’s kind of uncomfortable.”
“I grew up here and my friends are here. There’s nothing wrong with here.”
“Movies can’t ruin books. They can only ruin movies.”
“Sometimes, I feel like I spent the first part of my life wishing to be a teen-age boy, and the second part condemned to being one.”
“Anything you read can influence your work, so I try to read good stuff.”
“I like having a private name and a public name. It helps keep things straight.”
“’The Outsiders’ died on the vine being sold as a drugstore paperback.”
“I do feel that the boys are getting left out. Girls will read boys’ books, but boys won’t read girls’ books. If you’re writing for a girl, you’ve got most of the audience on your side anyway.”
“My husband and I get along great. We’re both introverts, and it’s hard to make new friends.”
“I find it to be easier to write from a man’s point of view.”
“Naturally, everything boils down to relationships in my books.”
“How a piece ends is very important to me. It’s the last chance to leave an impression with the reader, the last shot at ‘nailing’ it. I love to write ending lines; usually, I know them first and write toward them, but if I knew how they came to me, I wouldn’t tell.”
“When I was young, all the books were about a Mary Jane and the football player and the prom and ending up with the quiet guy and making your mom happy.”
“If people want to find me, they can. They’ll see a middle-aged woman wandering around the grocery store, looking to see what to buy for dinner.”
“I just felt being part of my peer group so strongly. I was immersed in teen culture, but not taken in by it.”
“The thing is, the Tulsa experience that I wrote about in ‘The Outsiders’ is closer to the universal experience than it would be if I wrote it from L.A. or New York. It’s an everyman story.”
“More people thought I was strange because I was a teenage novelist, not because I was from Oklahoma. That’s where I got the looks like I was from the zoo.”
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