
“Starting out, I imagined a straightforward book in three parts, moving along a taut narrative path with a sturdy foundation of clay undergirding all. Books have their own fates, however, and research—at least the kind of research that I practice—yields to serendipity. If the destination is known beforehand, what’s the point of the journey? A provisional map of the whole allows the woolgathering pilgrim to get a little lost along the way without losing his bearings completely. Meanwhile, coincidences and chance meetings confirm a certain rightness, a fit, in the meandering quest.”
Christopher Benfey
more infosource: Red Brick, Black Mountain, White Clay: Reflections on Art, Family, and Survival (New York: The Penguin press, 2012), 15.
category: book, coincidence, creative process, journey, map, quest, research, serendipity, unknown, wandering, writing
medium: Memoir
“The best research gets your fingers dusty and your shoes dirty, especially because a novel is made of details. I had to translate places through my senses into the senses of my readers. I had to know what a place smelled like, what it sounded like when it rained in Mexico City. There’s no substitute for that. I’ve been steeped in evidence-based truth.”
Barbara Kingsolver
more infosource: “Kahlo, Trotsky and Kingsolver,” Q&A by Cynthia Crossen, Wall Street Journal, October 30, 2009.
category: creative process, research, writing
medium: Interview
via: Beverly Bader“There are 15 floors of stacks with 64 rows of books per floor, running about 25 feet each; 6 or 7 shelves in each row. Can you actually browse there, find books on your own, faced with the dark phalanxes? You can, once you get subject areas in your head. Having made enough spot searches, you grasp the logic of each floor. There are no signs to help you, only diagrams with codes and numbers. You can also create luck in any given spot: You turn your head to the opposing row of books. A different subject area can arise, perhaps only partly to do with your areas of interest. This is non-link-based browsing. You can discover, instead of being endlessly sought.”
Ben Ratliff
more infosource: “Grazing in the Stacks of Academe,” New York Times, June 26, 2012.
category: book, library, research
medium: newspaper article
“What people don’t understand is that musicians swim backwards up the stream. You have what you like and then you want to see where it came from.”
Marc Ribot
more infosource: Marc Ribot interview with Bill Frisell, BOMB magazine , Issue 79, Spring 2002.
category: influence, musician, origin, research
medium: Interview
“I love Dickens. I love the way he sets a scene. He said, in his great admonition to writers, ‘Make me see.’ I try to make you see what’s happening and smell it and hear it. I want to know what they had for dinner. I want to know how long it took to walk from where to where.”
David McCullough
more infosource: Interview with NEH Chairman Bruce Cole, ca. 2002
category: book, creative process, history, research, writing
medium: Interview
via: Austin Kleon“And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.”
T. S. Eliot
more infosource: Little Gidding in Four Quartets (New York: Harcourt, 1971), 59.
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category: circle, exploration, knowledge, research
medium: Poetry
“People think librarians are unromantic, unimaginative. This is not true. Ask a mountain climber what he feels when sees a mountain; a lion tamer what goes through his mind when he meets a new lion; a doctor confronted with a beautiful malfunctioning body. The idea of a library full of books, the books full of knowledge, fills me with fear and love and courage and endless wonder. I knew I would be a librarian in college as a student assistant at a reference desk, watching those lovely people at work. ‘I don’t think there’s such a book—’ a patron would begin, and then the librarian would hand it to them, that very book.”
Elizabeth McCracken
more infosource: The Giant’s House (New York: The Dial Press, 1996), 8.
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category: librarian, research, work
medium: Fiction
“A good librarian is not so different from a prospector, her whole brain a divining rod. She walks to books and stands and wonders: here? Is the answer here? The same blind faith in finding, even when hopeless. If someone caught me when I was in the throes of tracking something elusive, I would have told them: but it’s out there. I can feel it.”
Elizabeth McCracken
more infosource: The Giant’s House (New York: Dial Press [trade paperback], 2007), 51.
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category: faith, librarian, library, research
medium: Fiction
“Writing nonfiction is more like sculpture, a matter of shaping the research into the finished thing. Novels are like paintings, specifically watercolors. Every stroke you put down you have to go with. Of course you can rewrite, but the original strokes are still therein the texture of the thing.”
Joan Didion
more infosource: The Paris Review Interviews, vol. I (New York: Picador, 2006), 476.
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category: creativity, nonfiction, novel, painting, research, sculpture, texture, watercolor, writing
medium: interview
notes: Originally published in Issue 176 of The Paris Review, 2006.


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