John Updike Quotes About Lying

We have collected for you the TOP of John Updike's best quotes about Lying! Here are collected all the quotes about Lying starting from the birthday of the Novelist – March 18, 1932! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 5 sayings of John Updike about Lying. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • A woman’s beauty lies, not in any exaggeration of the specialized zones, nor in any general harmony that could be worked out by means of the sectio aurea or a similar aesthetic superstition; but in the arabesque of the spine. The curve by which the back modulates into the buttocks. It is here that grace sits and rides a woman’s body.

    Laurie G. Kirszner, John Updike (1998). “A and P”, Heinle & Heinle Pub
  • What other sport holds out hope of improvement to a man or a woman over fifty? True, the pros begin to falter at around forty, but it is their putting nerves that go, not their swings. For a duffer like [me], the room for improvement is so vast that three lifetimes could be spent roaming the fiarways carving away at it, convinced that perfection lies just over the next rise. And that hope, perhaps, is the kindest bliss of all that golf bestows upon its devotees.

    Golf  
  • It is not difficult to deceive the first time, for the deceived possesses no antibodies; unvaccinated by suspicion, she overlooks lateness, accepts absurd excuses, permits the flimsiest patching to repair great rents in the quotidian.

    "Couples". Book by John Updike, 1968.
  • We are each of us like our little blue planet, hung in black space, upheld by nothing but our mutual reassurances, our loving lies.

    John Updike (2006). “Rabbit at Rest”, p.280, Penguin UK
  • You have a life and there are these volumes on either side that go unvisited; some day soon as the world winds he will lie beneath what he now stands on, dead as those insects whose sound he no longer hears, and the grass will go on growing, wild and blind.

    John Updike (2010). “Rabbit Is Rich”, p.313, Random House
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