Bobbie Ann Mason Quotes

Here, we’ve compiled a list of the best Bobbie Ann Mason Quotes. The wide variety of quotes available makes it possible to find a quote to suit your needs. You’ve likely heard some of the Bobbie Ann Mason Quotes before, but that’s because they truly are great.

1
I wanted to be somebody, go somewhere, do something wit

I wanted to be somebody, go somewhere, do something with my life.
Bobbie Ann Mason
2
My father had all these great names for our cows. Bossy and Daisy and Petunia and Turnip. One of my jobs was to round up the cows before milking. I’d go out back with the dog and bring them in.
Bobbie Ann Mason
3
During the Cold War, workers proudly contributed to national defense, but the carelessness and haste in handling toxic waste created a nightmare of pollution for subsequent generations.
Bobbie Ann Mason
4
My mother watched the skies at evening for a portent of the morrow. A cloud that went over and then turned around and came back was an especially bad sign.
Bobbie Ann Mason
5
‘In Country’ is about a high school girl‘s quest for knowledge about her father, who died in Vietnam just before she was born.
Bobbie Ann Mason
6
Reading can be just feeding, but smart reading takes us further. The classroom is one way to go deeper, but we can’t stay in school forever.
Bobbie Ann Mason
7
I grew up 150-200 miles from any city. You simply didn’t have much connection with the outside world. So my dreams were always to get out. It’s a familiar kind of thing, I think, for anybody in a small town.
Bobbie Ann Mason
8
I often say flippantly that the short story is… shorter; you can be done with it more easily. It’s much less of a commitment of time and energy than a big project like a novel or long nonfiction book.
Bobbie Ann Mason
9
Because we lived only a mile outside the town of Mayfield, I was acutely conscious of being country. I felt inferior to people in town because we had to grow our food and make our clothes.
Bobbie Ann Mason
10
I like to play with words and the sounds of words – that’s extremely important to me.
Bobbie Ann Mason
11
Memory is a powerful thing for a writer.
Bobbie Ann Mason
12
In the 1980s, Vietnam emerged in our culture as a legitimate and compelling topic for discussion rather than something to be hidden in shame.
Bobbie Ann Mason
13
The way I see it, a clever cat prowls but calls home occasionally.
Bobbie Ann Mason
14
We had a cistern for water. My grandmother churned butter and made lye soap. She and my mother did the washing in a wash kettle outdoors, using a fire to heat the water. That’s the way they did the wash until the 1950s.
Bobbie Ann Mason
15
The small family farm is dying; people’s lives are being dislocated.
Bobbie Ann Mason
16
I rejected the traditional notion of ‘women‘s work,’ but I never thought of my early ambitions in a feminist way, exactly. Primarily I rebelled against apathy and limited education. I was rejecting a whole way of life that I thought trapped everyone.
Bobbie Ann Mason
17
Physicists must feel they are in the most exciting field in the world. Their minds must be afire.
Bobbie Ann Mason
18
Bruce Springsteen‘s world is where everybody did these terrible jobs, if they had jobs at all, and he wanted something better.
Bobbie Ann Mason
19
Writing about where I was from and the people I knew was not something that would have occurred to me early on, because like so many Southerners of that period – the Sixties – I rejected those things when I went north.
Bobbie Ann Mason
20
My father-in-law, Barney Rawlings, spent a couple of months hiding out in France in 1944, frantically memorizing a few French words to pass himself off as a Frenchman, but his ordeal had not inspired in me any action until I started taking a French class.
Bobbie Ann Mason
21
I read many riveting escape-and-evade accounts of airmen and of the Resistance networks organized to hide them and then send them on grueling treks across the Pyrenees to safety. But it was the people I met in France and Belgium who made the period come alive for me. They had lived it.
Bobbie Ann Mason
22
Sometimes a book I’m reading is so terrific that when I finish, I simply turn back to page one and start all over again to see what I’ve missed, to experience it again, more deeply, or because I don’t want to let it go.
Bobbie Ann Mason
23
Writing a novel about World War II and the French Resistance was a challenge both sobering and thrilling.
Bobbie Ann Mason
24
I grew up on popular music, and rock-and-roll expresses very deep feelings of those people who don’t have a lot.
Bobbie Ann Mason
25
Rock and roll is about desire, about wanting something better. I think my characters all want something better. My understanding of the rock and roll dream is that a kid in an isolated place or a small town or an underprivileged world could transcend it somehow.
Bobbie Ann Mason
26
I was very bookish and shy. I didn’t have playmates, ever.
Bobbie Ann Mason
27
Working with food was fraught with anxiety when I was a girl. Like all farmers, we were at the mercy of the weather, and we lived in fear of crop failure.
Bobbie Ann Mason
28
‘In Country’ was also made into a film, which opened the story up to a broader audience.
Bobbie Ann Mason
29
My father-in-law was a pilot. During World War II, he was shot down in a B-17 over Belgium. With the help of the French Resistance, he made his way through Occupied France and back to his base in England.
Bobbie Ann Mason
30
I grew up on the precursors to rock and roll, rhythm and blues.
Bobbie Ann Mason
31
I was too shy to do anything but read, but there was nobody to tell me what to read.
Bobbie Ann Mason
32
Mama was a natural cook. At harvest time, she would whip up a noontime dinner for the men in the field: fried chicken with milk gravy, ham, mashed potatoes, lima beans, field peas, corn, slaw, sliced tomatoes, fried apples, biscuits, and peach pie.
Bobbie Ann Mason
33
I lived on the farm with my parents and grandparents. I had no playmates as a young child, and I was indulged. I helped my grandmother piece quilts, and we made pretty albums, an old-fashioned pastime. We cut poems and pictures out of magazines.
Bobbie Ann Mason
34
Writers want to be reread. They want to think that their words don’t just flash by but deserve some reflection.
Bobbie Ann Mason
35
In America, we all come from somewhere else, and we carry along some dream myth of home: a notion that something – our point of origin, our roots, the home country – is out there.
Bobbie Ann Mason
36
You have to realize that, when it comes to the South, we carry around a lot of baggage. The South lost the war, and I spent years denying my culture.
Bobbie Ann Mason
37
When I was growing up on our 53-acre dairy farm, we were obsessed with food; it was the center of our lives. We planted it, grew it, harvested it, peeled it, cooked it, served it, consumed it – endlessly, day after day, season after season.
Bobbie Ann Mason
38
Since ‘Huckleberry Finn,’ or thereabouts, it seemed that all American literature was about the alienated hero.
Bobbie Ann Mason
39
Reading is so private, and it is often a reader‘s habit to finish a book, close the covers, and plunge into the next one without a backward glance.
Bobbie Ann Mason
40
In the early Seventies, I started writing a little autobiographical novel about my childhood – I made it into a mystery story.
Bobbie Ann Mason
41
I used my NEA fellowship to write my novel, ‘In Country,’ which was published by Harper & Row in 1985.
Bobbie Ann Mason
42
In the country in Kentucky, people are just amazed that anybody in New York wants to read about their lives.
Bobbie Ann Mason
43
The farm is one field to the east of the railroad track that used to connect New Orleans with Chicago. The track runs beside Highway 45, an old U.S. route that unites Chicago with Mobile, Alabama.
Bobbie Ann Mason
44
It was important for me to understand who I am and where I came from. To get a hold on why I do certain things.
Bobbie Ann Mason
45
I suppose the desire to go to town helped make me ambitious, and the allure of the worlds that came in over the radio also helped. But the rewards of growing up on a farm were far greater in many ways than life in town.
Bobbie Ann Mason