. . . at it's best fiction is medicine.
I think the success of my work stems from being truthful.
I wouldn't mind spending a little more time and effort and money on good skin care. And I'm sure they'll come out with, as they are doing, with more and more treatments that are noninvasive and healthy ways to keep your face looking as good as it can.
The people who present themselves as normal and nice and good are often the scariest monsters in the world.
I think everyone is born funny. Sadly, some lives beat it out of them. I don't know what allows someone to keep being funny and actually make a career of it.
When you lose someone you love, they never really leave you. They just move into a special place in your heart.
The year I married my American husband, I won the lottery - and I tried to give it to somebody else, because I was already approved - not the money lottery, the immigration lottery.
It's very easy, when things like the gay marriage write-in happen, to get sick of how people view language and say, "ah, come on it's just a dictionary. " But then you hear from people who say if you take out "retarded" it won't exist anymore, and there will be no slurs for people to call my child. And that's just heartrending.
I think that good parenting should allow children to be children. That naivety and slightly open way of looking at the world is very valuable.
The struggles women face today are simultaneously very, very old and very new.
Never think that one voice is too small to be heard.