Said Sayrafiezadeh Quotes
Enjoy the top 40 famous quotes, sayings and quotations by Said Sayrafiezadeh.

“There was something so immensely redemptive and exciting for me to imagine that my unknown father was not just a man who had abandoned me but a noble man of adventure who had no choice.”
— Said Sayrafiezadeh —
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
My sister married an American and took his name, and my brother has shortened Sayrafiezadeh to Sayraf. So now he's Jacob Sayraf, or sometimes Jake Sayraf. He made the change when he was a teenager, prior to the Iranian revolution and the hostage crisis. So I don't think it was motivated by any anti-Iranian sentiment in the United States.
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
I need to feel as if everything is clean and in its proper place before I can even attempt to write one word. At least, that's what I tell myself. I make the bed, I put away the dishes, maybe I dust, maybe I do the laundry, maybe I go to the post office.
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
I feel more Jewish than I do Iranian.
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
“I work in the most non-Communist job. I work for 'Martha Stewart Living.'”
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
My characters are not underachievers; they aspire to great things, but they are limited by the world around them.
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
[Ending] is partly drawn from a desire to shock the audience, to brutally de-romanticize what many Americans think is happening overseas. And partly drawn from my own childhood: violence and a loss of innocence. But keep in mind that, as a writer, I'm both the criminal and the victim. I'm not trying to get out of anything easy.
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
When the ending finally comes to me, I often have to backtrack and make the beginning point towards that ending. Other times, I know exactly what the ending will be before I begin, like with the story "A Brief Encounter With the Enemy." It was all about the ending - that's what motivated me.
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
I sometimes have to write for a while before I figure it out, pretend that I know what I'm doing, sort of like ad-libbing on stage until you remember your line - you hope you sound convincing to the audience. The key is to have enough material, enough threads, so that there's something that can be satisfyingly drawn to a conclusion.
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
I don't work with an outline, except a vague one in my head, a general idea of character, place, arc ... I'm like a composer with a symphony in their head: I can hear the music, I just have to figure out how to put it down on paper. But I don't always know where my stories are going when I begin.
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
An initial impulse of mine was to portray the way in which a city is impacted by war. But this is vague, no? After all, how do you actually have an entire city - or country, for that matter - be a character a reader can follow? One way is by making it smaller and personalizing it, by writing specifically about the citizens and the way they contend with the reality, even minutiae, especially minutiae, of their lives.
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
Since most of the action of the war actually happens off the page (offstage), I wanted to give the characters something they had to contend with on a daily basis, some sort of obstacle. Weather seemed to be the one great equalizer regardless of your station in life - when it snows, everyone is inconvenienced to a certain degree. Plus it's tactile, weather, it affects the skin.
— Said Sayrafiezadeh
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