Phil Klay Quotes
Collection of top 66 famous quotes about Phil Klay
Phil Klay Quotes & Sayings
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The notion that war forever separates veterans from the rest of mankind has been long embedded in our collective consciousness.
— Phil Klay
I've been asked what differentiates war literature as a category, and I don't think there is anything.
— Phil Klay
And that was my homecoming. It was fine, I guess. Getting back feels like your first breath after nearly drowning. Even if it hurts, it's good.
— Phil Klay
Writing fiction was a way to take the ideas that troubled me or confused me and put them under pressure.
— Phil Klay
I have friends with post-traumatic stress - friends with post-traumatic stress who are, you know, highly successful, capable people.
— Phil Klay
When I tell stories about Iraq, the ones people react to are always the stories of violence. This is strange for me.
— Phil Klay
Veteran art creates a meeting place between veterans and civilians, or simply between veterans with different experiences.
— Phil Klay
I was studying with Peter Carey, Colum McCann; but also, my fellow students were really critical readers for me.
— Phil Klay
I did try to write in Iraq, and I failed. I think you just don't have the brain space for it.
— Phil Klay
Certainly, my exposure in high school to writers like Flannery O'Connor, Shusaku Endo, Fyodor Dostoevsky and Graham Greene was formative.
— Phil Klay
I don't want to act as though my deployment was particularly rough, because it wasn't. I had a very mild deployment; I was a staff officer.
— Phil Klay
I'd been in college studying English creative writing and history when I made the decision to join the Marines in the runup to the Iraq war.
— Phil Klay
I ended up going to Dartmouth, and I did Marine Officer Candidate School during my junior summer.
— Phil Klay
We're so used to using military terminology in civilian speech that we forget those terms might mean something very specific.
— Phil Klay
Less than 1 percent of American have served in 12 years of war, and serious public conversation about military policy is sorely lacking.
— Phil Klay
One thing I've always liked about the military is there's a certain amount of pragmatism.
— Phil Klay
If you're going to write about war, the ugly side is inevitable. Suffering and death are obviously part of war.
— Phil Klay
The Cold War provided justification for a larger peacetime military, since we were never really at peace, or so the argument went.
— Phil Klay
I grew up a little north of New York City and went to high school at Regis, an all-boys tuition-free high school in Manhattan.
— Phil Klay
War is complicated and intense, and it takes time and thoughts to understand what it was.
— Phil Klay
I like the ethos of the military and the idea of joining an institution in which, at the very least, everyone who signs up believes in something.
— Phil Klay
In State of the Union addresses, I always look at the foreign policy and military parts first, which are generally pretty minimal.
— Phil Klay
War is too strange to be processed alone,
— Phil Klay
In a strange way, you have to have a certain amount of distance from a thing in order to be able to write about it.
— Phil Klay
I'm not anti-war. I served in a war, and I served proudly. But just or not, necessary or not, war is the industrial-scale slaughter of other humans.
— Phil Klay
I saw so many radically different versions of Iraq. It would have been difficult for me to come back and think, 'This is the Iraq experience.'
— Phil Klay
Writing fiction means putting a lot of what you believe about the world at risk, because you have to follow your characters.
— Phil Klay
A great writer is a great writer ... Tolstoy was not a woman, but 'Anna Karenina' is still a pretty good book.
— Phil Klay
Going to war is a rare experience in American culture, so it's easy for simple notions to gain a lot of weight. The reality is always more complex.
— Phil Klay
Certainly, when I'd left Iraq back in 2008, I'd been proud of my service, but whether we'd been successful or not was still an open question.
— Phil Klay
There's a very particular way that the military speaks. There's a lot of profanity and a lot of acronyms.
— Phil Klay
Political novels are full of pitfalls, particularly for a novelist with strong political leanings.
— Phil Klay
There's a tradition of public service in my family. I'm one of three boys that joined the military. My father was in the Peace Corps.
— Phil Klay
I didn't want to write a 'this is how it is' Iraq book, because the Iraq War is an intensely complicated variety of things.
— Phil Klay
I have, for a very long time, been a huge admirer of Marilynne Robinson, whose work I just love.
— Phil Klay
I was angry. I'd gotten a lot of Thank You For Your Service handshakes, but nobody really knew what that service meant, you know?
— Phil Klay
Fiction offered me tools that allowed me to approach a wider variety of issues than the events of my own life would.
— Phil Klay
If we fetishize trauma as incommunicable, then survivors are trapped - unable to feel truly known by their nonmilitary friends and family.
— Phil Klay
It's not so much the question that offends me; it's that the people asking it don't seem to respect the moral seriousness of the question.
— Phil Klay
It's easier to get people to talk to you if you're a vet and you want to interview a vet about war. Sometimes they open up a little bit easier.
— Phil Klay
We are part of a long tradition of suffering. We can let it isolate us if we want, but we must realize that isolation is a lie.
— Phil Klay
We've got some PTSD vets," Sarah says, making it sound like she's keeping them in jars somewhere.
— Phil Klay
There's a tradition in war writing that the veteran goes over and sees the truth of war and comes back. And I'm skeptical of that.
— Phil Klay
War is too strange to process alone.
— Phil Klay
I doubt there's anything you could say to Donald Rumsfeld that would puncture the armor of his narcissism.
— Phil Klay
'Redeployment' is a military term. It means to transfer a unit from one area to another.
— Phil Klay
Pity sidesteps complexity in favor of narratives that we're comfortable with, reducing the nuances of a person's experience to a sound bite.
— Phil Klay