Amy Hempel
1951
5
Quotes
Biography
Amy Hempel is an American author known for her minimalist writing style and distinctive voice in contemporary fiction. She was born in Chicago in 1951 and raised in San Francisco. Hempel's work often explores themes of loss, grief, and human connection in succinct and emotionally resonant narratives. She has received critical acclaim for her short stories and essays, with several of her works being included in prestigious literary publications.
Famous Quotes (5)
1
The brain processes grief the same way it processes remorse. Same feeling, I think. Remorse is grief for actions. Grief is remorse for loss.
2
Part of my preparation is I go and ask the real vet questions. I can always tell who the real vet is because he can cut into an animal and fix it, just like a mechanic. It's the best cow-mechanic that human beings have going, whether that mechanic works on cows or people.
3
What I love about writing is the control. I can work with reckless abandon. No one is watching. No one is going to stand up and say, ‘No, that’s not right.'
4
The people we most love do become a physical part of us, ingrained in our synapses, in the pathways where memories are created.
5
In the morning, when it was time to see Charlie off, Lance had a hard time. His heart became heavy and filled with stone, not because they had been staying up late and talking, but because they hadn't. Everything was said in the unspoken Greek of men.