Peter Straub is a renowned American author of horror fiction, born on March 2, 1943. His works are known for their unique atmosphere of terror and profound psychological descriptions, and are considered classics in the field of horror literature.
Related Quotes
“Evil is a convenient fiction.”
“What's a good lawyer besides a superior bullshitter?...”
“We were so raw that we could be seduced by civility.”
“Nothing is whole, not for too damned long. The world is half night.”
“Many fiction writers eventually want to feel that their work forms a single, unified entity.”
“A lyrical, brave and complex novel that takes enormous risks and pulls them all off.”
“Could you defeat a cloud, a dream, a poem?”
“I liked the place I came from. But a lot of what I liked about it was that I had come from there.”
“Sometimes it is right to fear the dark.”
“Intellectual labor is a common technique for the avoidance of thinking.”
“The world is full of ghosts, and some of them are still people.”
“You'll never get anything done if you walk around with an unchipped heart.”
“I generally wade in blind and trust to fate and instinct to see me through.”
“Wolves and those who see them are shot on sight.”
“I instantly chucked my academic ambitions and began writing fiction full-time.”
