William Saroyan photo

William Saroyan

Works of American writer William Saroyan include short stories, such as "The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze" (1934), plays, most notably

The Time of Your Life

(1939), and novels.

This Armenian author set much in Fresno, sometimes under a fictional name, the center of life in California.

From Bitlis, Turkey, his parents migrated. After death of his father at the age of three years in 1911, people placed Saroyan in the orphanage in Oakland, California, together with his brother and sister, an experience he later described. Five years later, in 1916, the family reunited in Fresno, where his mother, Takoohi Saroyan, secured work at a cannery. He continued his own education and took odd jobs, such as working as an office manager for the San Francisco telegraph company, for support.

After his mother showed him some of his father, he decided. Overland Monthly published a few of his early short articles. His first stories appeared in the 1930s. The Armenian journal Hairenik published "The Broken Wheel" under the name Sirak Goryan in 1933. Childhood experiences among the Armenian fruit of the San Joaquin Valley based much that dealt with the rootlessness of the migrant. The collection My Name is Aram (1940), an international bestseller, about a young boy and the colorful characters of his migrant family. People translated it into many languages.

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“You write a hit play the same way you write a flop”
William Saroyan
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“I believe there are ways whose ends are life instead of death.”
William Saroyan
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“Genius is play, and man's capacity for achieving genius is infinite, and many may achieve genius only through play.”
William Saroyan
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“All things lie dark in possibility.”
William Saroyan
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“You know the look: genius gone to pot, and ready to join the Communist Party”
William Saroyan
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“This is what drives a young writer out of his head, this feeling that nothing is being said.”
William Saroyan
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“I can't hate for long. It isn't worth it.”
William Saroyan
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“No enemy is so annoying as one who was a friend, or still is a friend,and there are many more of these than one would suspect.”
William Saroyan
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“He was under the impression that he belonged wherever there was something interesting to see.”
William Saroyan
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“What my children appear to be on the surface is no matter to me. I am fooled neither by gracious manners nor by bad manners. I am interested in what is truly beneath each kind of manners…I want my children to be people– each one separate– each one special– each one a pleasant and exciting variation of all the others”
William Saroyan
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“I watch the growth of spirit in the children who come to my class.”
William Saroyan
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“I never knew teachers are human beings like everybody else-- and better too!”
William Saroyan
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“You must not be unkind, especially when it happens that you're right.”
William Saroyan
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“All of the sudden," he said, "I feel different-- not like I ever felt before. Even when Papa died I didn't feel this way. In two days everything is changed. I'm lonely and I don't now what I'm lonely for”
William Saroyan
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“Two years ago your father died, Ulysses. But as long as we are alive, as long as we are together, as long as two of us are left, and remember him, nothing in the world can take him from us.”
William Saroyan
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“Future?" Homer said. He was a little embarrassed because all his life, from day to day, he had been busy mapping out a future, even if it was only a future for the next day. "Well," he said, "I don't know for sure, but I guess I'd like to be somebody some day.”
William Saroyan
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“People are people. Don't be afraid of them.”
William Saroyan
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“Live, for this is the time of your life.”
William Saroyan
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“Lionel whispered because he was under the impression that it was out of respect for books, not consideration for readers.”
William Saroyan
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“When Ulysses saw his brother, a wonderful thing happened to his face. All the terror left his eyes, because now he was home”
William Saroyan
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“It takes a lot of rehearsing for a man to be himself.”
William Saroyan
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“We didn't say anything because there was such an awful lot to say, and no language to say it in.”
William Saroyan
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“The child race is fresh, eager, interested, innocent, imaginative, healthy and full of faith, where the adult race, more often than not, is stale, spiritually debauched, unimaginative, unhealthy, and without faith.”
William Saroyan
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“My birthplace was California, but I couldn't forget Armenia, so what is one's country? Is it land of the earth, in a specific place? Rivers there? Lakes? The sky there? The way the moon comes up there? And the sun? Is one's country the trees, the vineyards, the grass, the birds, the rocks, the hills and summer and winter? Is it the animal rhythm of the living there? The huts and houses, the streets of cities, the tables and chairs, and the drinking of tea and talking? Is it the peach ripening in summer heat on the bough? Is it the dead in the earth there?”
William Saroyan
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“A man's ethnic identity has more to do with a personal awareness than with geography.”
William Saroyan
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“There is a small area of land in Asia Minor that is called Armenia, but it is not so. It is not Armenia. It is a place. There are only Armenians, and they inhabit the earth, not Armenia, since there is no Armenia. There is no America and there is no England, and no France, and no Italy. There is only the earth.”
William Saroyan
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“Every man in the world is better than someone else and not as good as someone else.”
William Saroyan
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“If I want to do anything, I want to speak a more universal language.”
William Saroyan
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“I don't think my writing is sentimental, although it is a very sentimental thing to be a human being.”
William Saroyan
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“When I was fifteen and had quit school forever, I went to work in a vineyard near Sanger with a number of Mexicans, one of whom was only a year or two older than myself, an earnest boy named Felipe. One gray, dismal, cold, dreary day in January, while we were pruning muscat vines, I said to this boy, simply in order to be talking, "If you had your wish, Felipe, what would you want to be? A doctor, a farmer, a singer, a painter, a matador, or what?" Felipe thought a minute, and then he said, "Passenger." This was exciting to hear, and definitely something to talk about at some length, which we did. He wanted to be a passenger on anything that was going anywhere, but most of all on a ship.”
William Saroyan
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“I am interested in madness. I believe it is the biggest thing in the human race, and the most constant. How do you take away from a man his madness without also taking away his identity? Are we sure it is desirable for a man's spirit not to be at war with itself, or that it is better to be serene and ready to go to dinner than to be excited and unwilling to stop for a cup of coffee, even?”
William Saroyan
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“One day in the afternoon of the world, glum death will come and sit in you, and when you get up to walk, you will be as glum as death, but if you're lucky, this will only make the fun better and the love greater.”
William Saroyan
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“What can I tell you, except the stupid little I know?”
William Saroyan
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“Zombies have got to do a lot of hanging around together--weaklings, liars, cheaters. Everybody respects them these days, everybody thinks that if they don't respect them it means they're against civil liberties or something, but I can only sympathize with them a little, but only a little; I can't respect them, they bore me--their everlasting bawling about their tricky little sadnesses and deprivations of childhood bore me. You've introduced me to some of the people you know. I don't dislike any of them, but I really can't pretend I believe in any of them, or that they don't bore me. And in being critical of them of course I'm being critical of you, too, at least for having them as friends. There are other people around, too, you know, not just the ones who start by giving up, and then just hang around to see what giving up leads to. It leads to being a zombie of one sort or another.”
William Saroyan
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“Sometimes the most intelligent thing is not to do anything, certainly nothing loaded with the imbecility of emotionality.”
William Saroyan
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“I have an idea that most of all he is running away from love, because it's too big and too demanding. He's running away from us--from you, from me, from his sister, from himself, too. Who wants to be himself, who wants to be so little, and so captured and limited?”
William Saroyan
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“He's finding out, he's doing all right, he'll go to school but nobody's going to teach him anything.”
William Saroyan
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“What do you mean, what's the matter with him? Nothing's the matter with him, everything's the matter with him, the same as it is with everybody else. He's just fine. He gets overwhelmed now and then, and he doesn't know how to say what he feels or means, so he cries and runs off a little, trying to find out where to go, for God's sake. Where can you go?”
William Saroyan
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“Cowards are nice, they're interesting, they're gentle, they wouldn't think of shooting down people in a parade from a tower. They want to live, so they can see their kids. They're very brave.”
William Saroyan
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“She cried a little, but only inside, because long ago she had decided she didn't like crying because if you ever started to cry it seemed as if there was so much to cry about you almost couldn't stop, and she didn't like that at all.”
William Saroyan
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“The writer who is a real writer is a rebel who never stops.”
William Saroyan
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“Writing is the hardest way of earning a living with the possible exception of wrestling alligators.”
William Saroyan
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“Everybody has got to die, but I have always believed an exception would be made in my case.”
William Saroyan
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“Unless a man has pity he is not truly a man. If a man has not wept at the worlds pain he is only half a man, and there will always be pain in the world, knowing this does not mean that a man shall dispair. A good man will seek to take pain out of things. A foolish man will not even notice it, except in himself, and the poor unfortunate evil man will drive pain deeper into things and spread it about wherever he goes.”
William Saroyan
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“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose history is ended, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, whose literature is unread, whose music is unheard, whose prayers are no longer uttered. Go ahead, destroy this race. Let us say that it is again 1915. There is war in the world. Destroy Armenia. See if you can do it. Send them from their homes into the desert. Let them have neither bread nor water. Burn their houses and their churches. See if they will not live again. See if they will not laugh again. See if the race will not live again when two of them meet in a beer parlor, twenty years after, and laugh, and speak in their tongue. Go ahead, see if you can do anything about it. See if you can stop them from mocking the big ideas of the world, you sons of bitches, a couple of Armenians talking in the world, go ahead and try to destroy them.”
William Saroyan
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“In the time of your life, live---so that in that good time there shall be no ugliness or death for yourself or for andy life your life touches.”
William Saroyan
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“In the time of your life, live—so that in that good time there shall be no ugliness or death for yourself or for any life your life touches. Seek goodness everywhere, and when it is found, bring it out of its hiding place and let it be free and unashamed.Place in matter and in flesh the least of the values, for these are the things that hold death and must pass away. Discover in all things that which shines and is beyond corruption. Encourage virtue in whatever heart it may have been driven into secrecy and sorrow by the shame and terror of the world. Ignore the obvious, for it is unworthy of the clear eye and the kindly heart.Be the inferior of no man, or of any men be superior. Remember that every man is a variation of yourself. No man's guilt is not yours, nor is any man's innocence a thing apart. Despise evil and ungodliness, but not men of ungodliness or evil. These, understand. Have no shame in being kindly and gentle but if the time comes in the time of your life to kill, kill and have no regret.In the time of your life, live—so that in that wondrous time you shall not add to the misery and sorrow of the world, but shall smile to the infinite delight and mystery of it.”
William Saroyan
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“The role of art is to make a world which can be inhabited.”
William Saroyan
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