Thus far, everything I've made has come out of my really feeling it, out of the fire of my life. Miranda July More Quotes by Miranda July More Quotes From Miranda July Long before I started to write in earnest, Lorrie Moore taught me you could have a woman narrator who was funny and complex and even wrongheaded. She opened up a lot of space that me and a million other women rushed into. Miranda July me you women funny There's no law against asking strangers about their lives and feelings, although sometimes it really feels like there is. Miranda July strangers law feelings sometimes I am a big fan of work in any medium that can take on death - being dead, being a soul - in a new way. Miranda July i-am soul work death I prefer a great novel, but many novels come with a bunch of novel-y writerliness that feels sort of macho to me, so I do end up reading lots of shorter things. Miranda July end great me reading The moment I feel pressure to read a book, I instinctively rebel against it - which is probably one reason I didn't last long in college. Miranda July feel moment long book I'm not embarrassed about not having read any book. Miranda July having about embarrassed book I think this is how life is. It's not a linear march through time; you revolve around the same old things as you age and acquire experiences. Miranda July you age time life Each couple's version of intimacy is so fascinating to me. A friend will tell me about her marriage, and I'll think, 'Yikes, they have horrible communication! They're going to get divorced!' And then I'll hear about them at another time and think, 'Wow, they love each other so much!' Miranda July me marriage communication love Women writers are often conflated with their narrators - as if we can't consciously construct fictional worlds from the ground up and can only write diary entries. Miranda July diary ground only women I'm often drawn in by a description of a woman thinking something familiar that's never been articulated before, as in Diane Cook's 'Somebody's Baby' or Nina Berberova's 'The Tattered Cloak.' Miranda July woman never baby thinking