Fran Lebowitz (1950) author and public speaker from the United States
"Words Are Easy, Books Are Not," interview with Bob Morris, The New York Times (1994-08-10), Late Edition, Section C, page 1, column 1.
Source: Let's Explore Diabetes with Owls
Fran Lebowitz (1950) author and public speaker from the United States
"Words Are Easy, Books Are Not," interview with Bob Morris, The New York Times (1994-08-10), Late Edition, Section C, page 1, column 1.
“I think that I was quite a grown-up child, and I have been a pretty childish adult.”
Arundhati Roy (1961) Indian novelist, essayist
“In the child, we see the grown-up. I see the problem differently.”
Otto Ohlendorf (1907–1951) German general
To Leon Goldensohn, March 1, 1946, after Goldensohn asks Ohlendorf, "How did you figure a six month old Jewish infant must be killed - was it an enemy? Quoted in "The Nuremberg Interviews" by Leon Goldensohn, Robert Gellately - History - 2004.
Philip K. Dick book The Man in the High Castle
Source: The Man in the High Castle (1962)
Context: When I was a child, I thought as a child. But now I have put away childish things.... I must be scientific.
Sören Kierkegaard (1813–1855) Danish philosopher and theologian, founder of Existentialism
Prefaces, Nichol, 1997 p. 39-40
1840s, Prefaces (1844)
Bill Watterson (1958) American comic artist
Source: The Revenge of the Baby-Sat
Albert Einstein (1879–1955) German-born physicist and founder of the theory of relativity
In Carl Seelig's Albert Einstein: A Documentary Biography (1956), Seelig reports that Einstein said this to James Franck, p. 71 http://books.google.com/books?id=VCbPAAAAMAAJ&q=%22how+it+happened%22#search_anchor. <br class="br">I sometimes ask myself how did it come that I was the one to develop the theory of relativity. The reason, I think, is that a normal adult never stops to think about problems of space and time. But my intellectual development was retarded, as a result of which I began to wonder about space and time only when I had already grown up. Naturally, I could go deeper into the problem than a child with normal abilities. <br class="br">Variant translation which appears in Einstein: The Life and Times by Ronald W. Clark (1971), p. 27 http://books.google.com/books?id=6IKVA0lY6MAC&lpg=PP1&pg=PA27#v=onepage&q&f=false <br class="br">Attributed in posthumous publications
Randall Jarrell (1914–1965) poet, critic, novelist, essayist
"An Unread Book," introduction to The Man Who Loved Children by Christina Stead (Holt, Rinehart, 1965 edition)
General sources