Raymond Chandler słynne cytaty
Źródło: Pokerowe cytaty http://www.kasyno-internetowe.pl/cytaty.html
Źródło: notka napisana do Suplementu pisarzy XX wieku, [za:] Mówi Chandler (Raymond Chandler speaking)
Raymond Chandler cytaty
Długie pożegnanie
Źródło: list do Jamesa Sandoe, krytyka literackiego, z 17 października 1948 [za:] Mówi Chandler („Raymond Chandler speaking”)
„Żegnać się, to tak, jakby trochę umierać.”
Długie pożegnanie
Cissy to starsza od męża o 18 lat żona Chandlera, zmarła 12 grudnia 1954.
Źródło: list do Hamisha Hamiltona, wydawcy książek Chandlera, z 5 stycznia 1955 [za:] Mówi Chandler („Raymond Chandler speaking”)
„Mogłabym ci kupić cały świat, pod warunkiem, że byłby wart kupienia.”
Długie pożegnanie
Raymond Chandler: Cytaty po angielsku
“To the memory of Mr. Stan Phillips. (…) Just another four-flusher.”
"Red Wind" (short story, 1938), published in Trouble Is My Business (1939)
“You can always tell a detective on TV. He never takes his hat off.”
Źródło: Playback (1958), chapter 14
“He didn't curl his lip because it had been curled when he came in.”
Źródło: The High Window (1942), chapter 3
“You know what Canino will do---beat my teeth out and then kick me in the stomach for mumbling.”
Źródło: The Big Sleep (1939), Chapter 28
essay, first appeared in The Atlantic Monthly (November, 1945)
The Simple Art of Murder (1950)
"Twelve Notes on the Mystery Story", published in The Notebooks of Raymond Chandler(1976)
“Hollywood is wonderful. Anyone who doesn't like it is either crazy or sober.”
As quoted in Hollywood Remembered : An Oral History of Its Golden Age (2002) by Paul Zollo
"A Qualified Farewell" (essay, early 1950's), published in The Notebooks of Raymond Chandler (1976)
"A Qualified Farewell" (essay, early 1950's), published in The Notebooks of Raymond Chandler (1976)
essay, first appeared in The Atlantic Monthly (November, 1945)
The Simple Art of Murder (1950)
letter, 22 April 1949, published in Raymond Chandler Speaking (1962)
“A nice state of affairs when a man has to indulge his vices by proxy.”
Źródło: The Big Sleep (1939), chapter 2
“The girl slept on, motionless, in that curled-up looseness achieved by some women and all cats.”
"'I'll Be Waiting' (short story), published in the Saturday Evening Post, October 14, 1939
'Si.' He smiled again. A brilliant warm smile, like the kiss of death.
Źródło: The High Window (1942), chapter 24
“"Tall, aren't you?" she said. "I didn't mean to be."”
Źródło: The Big Sleep (1939), chapter one
"Red Wind" (short story, 1938), published in Trouble Is My Business (1939)