With some of us, wanting to write begins in childhood. John Updike:
Think of a pencil. What a quiet, nimble, slender and then stubby wonder-worker he is! At his touch, worlds leap into being; a tiger with no danger, a steam-roller with no weight, a palace at no cost. All children are alive to the spell of pencil and crayons, of making something, as it were, from nothing; a few children never move out from under this spell, and try to become artists!
(Quoted from page 4 of First Person Singular: Writers on Their Craft, by Joyce Carol Oates. Ontario Press Review, 1983.)
For a brief biography of John Updike, click here. For images of or relating to John Updike, click here.
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