I thought that to write of my own experiences would require a translation out of the crude patois of actual slow suffering — mean, scattered thoughts… - Edmund White

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I thought that to write of my own experiences would require a translation out of the crude patois of actual slow suffering — mean, scattered thoughts and transfusion-slow boredom — into the tidy couplets of brisk, beautiful sentiment, a way of at once elevating and lending momentum to what I felt.

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About Edmund White

Edmund White (born January 13, 1940) is an American novelist, memoirist, and an essayist on literary and social topics. Much of his writing is on the theme of same-sex love. Probably his best-known books are The Joy of Gay Sex (1977) (written with Charles Silverstein) and his trio of autobiographic novels, A Boy's Own Story (1982), The Beautiful Room Is Empty (1988) and The Farewell Symphony (1997).

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Also Known As

Alternative Names: Edmund Valentine White III
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Additional quotes by Edmund White

How thrilling to discover one had depths, how consoling to find them less polluted than the shallows, how encouraging to identify the enemy not as a fissure in the will but as a dead fetus in the specimen jar of the unconscious. My attention was being paternally led away from the excruciating present to the happy, healthy future that would be enabled by an analysis of the sick past, as though the priest had nothing to do but study old books and make bright forecasts, the present not worthy of notice.

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I was three people: the boy who smelled bad when I was with my sister; the boy who was wise and kind beyond his years when I was with my mother; but when I was alone not a boy at all but a principle of power, of absolute power.

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