Readers Quotes
I always like to entertain, first of all, and if the readers take anything away from it that helps them with their own lives, well then, that is a bonus.
Tags: Away, Lives ✍ Author: Cecelia AhernThose who write clearly have readers, those who write obscurely have commentators.
Tags: Clearly, Write ✍ Author: Albert CamusI don't think I'm an unkind person, I don't think my books are unkind, and I don't think my readers are unkind.
Tags: Books, Unkind ✍ Author: Julian FellowesA lot of its readers are of an age where they forget to cancel.
Tags: Age, Forget ✍ Author: Tom FeltonI don't really believe in palm readers and crystal balls and tarot cards, but I respond to the need for them.
Tags: Balls, Cards ✍ Author: Stephan JenkinsI'm always astonished by the confidence my readers put in me.
Tags: Confidence, Put ✍ Author: Mary KarrThe headline is the 'ticket on the meat.' Use it to flag down readers who are prospects for the kind of product you are advertising.
Tags: Flag, Meat ✍ Author: David OgilvyThere is no need for advertisements to look like advertisements. If you make them look like editorial pages, you will attract about 50 per cent more readers.
Tags: Attract, Pages ✍ Author: David OgilvyThere will always be non-readers, bad readers, lazy readers - there always were.
Tags: Bad, Lazy ✍ Author: Julian BarnesEven now I try to make each page compelling for the readers to get absorbed in the book.
Tags: Book, Try ✍ Author: Chetan BhagatReaders are made by readers - it is so obvious it is almost banal to say it.
Tags: Almost, Obvious ✍ Author: Aidan ChambersIn the first person, the readers feel smart, like it's them solving the case.
Tags: Smart, Solving ✍ Author: Patricia CornwellCertain readers resented me when they could no longer recognize their territory, their institution.
Tags: Longer, Recognize ✍ Author: Jacques DerridaThe publishing world is very timid. Readers are much braver.
Tags: Publishing, Timid ✍ Author: Kiran DesaiI would like to provoke ambiguous responses in my readers.
Tags: Ambiguous, Provoke ✍ Author: James EllroyI don't want my readers slowed down by long passages of narrative.
Tags: Narrative, Passages ✍ Author: Janet EvanovichThe kids who speak well, are articulate and intelligent, are all readers.
Tags: Kids, Speak ✍ Author: Richard Paul EvansVisit partners pages
'Time' is an internationalist publication catering to internationalist readers who are not only interested in their own backyard.
Tags: Interested, Time ✍ Author: Andrea M. GhezThe future of publishing is about having connections to readers and the knowledge of what those readers want.
Tags: Future, Knowledge ✍ Author: Seth GodinI wouldn't say the world is my parish, but my readers are my parish. And especially the readers that write to me. They're my parish. And it's a responsibility that I enjoy.
Tags: Enjoy, Write ✍ Author: Andrew GreeleyReaders are what it's all about, aren't they? If not, why am I writing?
Tags: Why, Writing ✍ Author: Evan HunterI'm proud of what I write and feel endorsed by my readers.
Tags: Proud, Write ✍ Author: Marian KeyesI've included these little jokes and mysteries in my writing for the amusement of readers.
Tags: Jokes, Writing ✍ Author: Armistead MaupinNovelisation doesn't imply the truth. Readers are sophisticated enough to know that.
Tags: Enough, Truth ✍ Author: Little MiltonI do like to wrap things up and leave some things to the readers' imagination.
Tags: Leave, Wrap ✍ Author: Rick RiordanOur poems will have failed if our readers are not brought by them beyond the poems.
Tags: Beyond, Failed ✍ Author: Muriel RukeyserThe wider your readership, the greater the chances of offending your readers.
Tags: Chances, Greater ✍ Author: Alan SmithOnly a generation of readers will span a generation of writers.
Tags: Generation, Writers ✍ Author: Logan Pearsall SmithLike all readers, I want my limits to be drawn by my own sensibilities, not by my melanin count.
Tags: Count, Limits ✍ Author: Zadie SmithI sit in my little office and I feel like I've got all my readers staring at me.
Tags: Office, Sit ✍ Author: James Stockdale