Lorrie Moore (born Marie Lorena Moore on January 13, 1957) is an American fiction writer known mainly for her humorous and poignant short stories. Read full biography of Lorrie Moore →
I want to create something that doesn't exist exactly in the real world, but exists in a kind of parallel to the real world.
I'm very interested in what people will do for money. Money: it's timeless.
I've had nonstop financial problems my whole adult life. It's always been a constant balance, year to year: 'Where's the time?... →
It was part of being a girl in the '60s that you were creative.
Literature, of course, is not a contest.
Nabokov's adventures in language and style and naked braininess are really unparalleled.
My father was the child of academics and was probably destined to become an academic himself but vetoed that idea. Bailed, dropped out of graduate... →
I grew up with 'Life' magazine on the coffee table, Life cereal on the breakfast table, and the game of Life on the card table. People were... →
A story is a kind of biopsy of human life. A story is both local, specific, small, and deep, in a kind of penetrating, layered, and revealing way.
I always feel that the book I'm working on is my last book.
I think women do write politically all the time. Margaret Atwood does; Doris Lessing does.
I usually grow sick of my short-story characters and think, 'I never want to see you again.'
I'm not sure that niceness is what we should promote in writers.