Peoples, Places and Books (1953) http://www.dim.uchile.cl/~anmoreir/varios/byzantium.html
“Mexico city is a terminal of space-time travel, a waiting room where you grab a quick drink while you wait for your train. That is why I can stand to be in Mexico City for your train. That is why I can stand to be in Mexico City or New York. You are not struck; by the fact of being there at all, you are traveling. But in Panama, crossroads of the world, you are exactly so much aging tissue. You have to make arrangements with Pan Am or the Dutch Line for removal of your body. Otherwise, it would stay there and rot in muggy heat, under a galvanized iron roof.”
Two Years Later: Mexico City Return
Queer: A Novel (1985)
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William S. Burroughs 110
American novelist, short story writer, essayist, painter, a… 1914–1997Related quotes

Don't Ask Me Why.
Song lyrics, Glass Houses (1980)

"I am envious of writers who are in India" http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/envious-of-writers-who-are-in-india-kiran-desai/1/180336.html (October 30, 2006), Interview by Nabanita Sircar, India Today

Session 758, Page 25
The Nature of the Psyche: Its Human Expression (1979)

De Tweede Helft, Ad de Visser, SUN, Nijmegen 1998, p. 107
from posthumous publications

“It struck me that distant cities are designed precisely so you can know where you came from.”
Source: Let the Great World Spin

Where and How do You Want to Live Your Life? http://www.unification.net/1996/960609.html, (1996-06-09)

“Open your eyes, train your ears, use your head. If a mind you have, then use it while you can.”
Source: Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World