Zitat des Tages von Ross MacDonald:
Money costs too much.
There are certain families whose members should all live in different towns - different states, if possible - and write each other letters once a year.
I had reached the point when I could not see anything clearly ahead, I needed help, and I got it.
As a man gets older, if he knows what is good for him, the women he likes are getting older too. The trouble is that most of them are married.
My half-suppressed Canadian years, my whole childhood and youth, rose like a corpse from the bottom of the sea to confront me.
The surprise with which a detective novel concludes should set up tragic vibrations which run backward through the entire structure.
Freud was one of the greatest influences on me. He made myth into psychiatry, and I've been trying to turn it back into myth again.
When there's trouble in a family, it tends to show up in the weakest member. And all the other members of the family know that. They make allowances for the one in trouble.
I knew how it was with drunks. They ran out of generosity, even for themselves.
I wanted to write as well as I possibly could to deal with life-and-death problems in contemporary society. And the form of Wilkie Collins and Graham Greene, of Hammett and Chandler, seemed to offer me all the rope I would ever need.
We writers, as we work our way deeper into our craft, learn to drop more and more personal clues. Like burglars who secretly wish to be caught, we leave our fingerprints on broken locks, our voiceprints in bugged rooms, our footprints in the wet concrete.
Hell lies at the bottom of the human heart.
How can a man help breaking the law when he don't have money to live on?
An ugly woman with an ugly gun is a terrible thing.
The Archer novels are about various kinds of brokenness.