The more I read, to me the more incredible everything is. Based on what I've read, there are all these other dimensional planes and spaces, mathematically proven.
I'm a huge Cormac McCarthy fan and have read every book of his.
When I got the script for Memento, I read it and I got killed off on page one and I fired my agent.
I've yet to read a memoir by anyone I've known at all well that came anywhere near to the truth.
I haven't read Ibsen, Shaw, Shakespeare - except 'The Merchant of Venice' in ninth grade. I'm not familiar with 'Death of a Salesman.' I haven't read Tennessee Williams.
'Misty of Chincoteague', 'The Black Stallion', the 'Saddle Club' books, I read 'em all. I was horse-crazy.
I have never read 'To Kill A Mockingbird.'
When I read 'To Kill a Mockingbird,' I was so struck by the universality of small towns.
When I was in high school, I read all of Neil Simon's plays.
I'm really nerdy, and I read a lot.
Read my lips: no new taxes.
And we also read Newsweek, Time and several newspapers.
I'm a Nietzschean scholar. I've read an immense amount about nihilism and existentialism.
I tend to read non-fiction.
I read the same amount of nonfiction and fiction.
People respect nonfiction but they read novels.
My high-school papers, my college-application essays, read like Norman Mailer packed in a crunchy-peanut-butter sandwich.
I wrote my first novel because I wanted to read it.
Ayn Rand is a rhetorician who writes novels I have never been able to read.
I read the NY Times but I don't trust all of it.