The Paris Review interview (2010)
Context: When I was seventeen I read everything by Robert Heinlein and Arthur Clarke, and the early writings of Theodore Sturgeon and Van Vogt — all the people who appeared in Astounding Science Fiction — but my big science-fiction influences are H. G. Wells and Jules Verne. I’ve found that I’m a lot like Verne — a writer of moral fables, an instructor in the humanities. He believes the human being is in a strange situation in a very strange world, and he believes that we can triumph by behaving morally. His hero Nemo — who in a way is the flip side of Melville’s madman, Ahab — goes about the world taking weapons away from people to instruct them toward peace.
“It is one of the triumphs of the human that he can know a thing and still not believe it.”
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John Steinbeck 366
American writer 1902–1968Related quotes
This Business of Living (1935-1950)
Source: Aphorisms and Reflections (1901), pp. 234-235
“If there's one thing I believe, its that I don't know anything and anything can happen”
Source: Novels, Anonymous (2013), Chapter 1