I don't reread my books.
When I find a golf course or a restaurant or a market that I like, that's pretty much exclusively where I go.
Really, I think of fame as distracting; it's something you have to get around.
I can relate to somebody wanting to have something to believe in.
I have two concerns with my work: having good things to act, and getting paid. In that order. Although if you're not getting paid well, that order can change. But that's what I'm concerned about. Good scenes. Decent money.
When you're convinced that you're right and you believe that you have the license to do anything because you're right, you can be bossy and you can be dangerous. You can be oppressive. You can be a tyrant.
It's funny to be discovered by a lot of people who didn't know you before. People always used to say, 'Do you shop at Home Depot?' or 'Does your kid go to such and such school?' They want to know why they know me, even if they don't know my name. I don't think that's a bad thing, by the way; I think it's nice to be kind of anonymously famous.
We ought to get back to making America great again, which is what we're going to do. And we've already started the process.
I improve on misquotation.
Unsoundness in a slave, as well as in a horse, detracts materially from his value. If no warranty is given, a close examination is a matter of particular importance to the Negro jockey.
my poems covered the bare places in my childhood like the fine, new skin under a scab that hasn't yet fallen off completely.