
“I had a story tell, a story that needed to be told so that people would know the truth.”
Congressional testimony (2007)
"Fiction", speech to the Royal Society of Literature, June 1926; published in Writings on Writing: Rudyard Kipling (1996), ed. Sandra Kemp and Lisa Lewis, p. 80 http://books.google.com/books?id=-AQStA5QMjwC&q=%22elder+sister%22&pg=PA80
Other works
“I had a story tell, a story that needed to be told so that people would know the truth.”
Congressional testimony (2007)
“What would happen if one woman told the truth about her life?
The world would split open.”
Why I Am An Agnostic (1929)
“Obviously, the truth is what's so. Not so obviously, it's also so what.”
[175, Larson's Book of World Religions and Alternative Spirituality, Bob Larson, Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 2004, 084236417X]
Attributed
“Obviously the truth is what's so. Not so obviously, it is also so what.”
Quoted by Bernard Roth as the lead in to Chapter 2 "Reasons Are Bullshit", in his book, "The Achievement Habit".
Source: "The Achievement Habit" by Bernard Roth, Publisher - Harper Collins, pg. 39, ISBN: 978-0-06-235610-9
“Wars produce many stories of fiction, some of which are told until they are believed to be true.”
Source: 1880s, Personal Memoirs of General U. S. Grant (1885), Ch. 67.
“Stories are consoling, fiction is one of the consolation prizes for having lived in the world.”
Source: Conversations with Don Delillo
“Description is a story well told already; experience offers truth.”
“Lackadaisical Elements,” p. 93
The Creator (2000), Sequence: “Nostalgic Elements”