Best quotes by Marjorie Kellogg

Marjorie Kellogg

Marjorie Kellogg

American author

Marjorie Kellogg was born in Santa Barbara, California, July 17, 1922. Kellogg attended and dropped out of the University of California, Berkeley before going to San Francisco to pursue a career in writing. She worked at the San Francisco Chronicle as a copy editor.

She later received a job with Salute Magazine, where she was sent to write about the aftermath of World War II in France and Spain. When she returned to the United States, Kellogg earned a master's degree in social work at Smith College. She relocated to New York City, where she worked in various agencies as a social worker, which she credited as her inspiration for the characters in her books, plays and films.

In 1968, Kellogg published Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon, her first novel and most famous work, and two years later, she wrote the screenplay for the film adaptation. The movie was directed by Otto Preminger and starred Liza Minnelli. She later wrote a screenplay adaptation of Sylvia Plath's novel The Bell Jar. Her second novel was Like the Lion's Tooth, which was about three emotionally distraught children. Carl Williams directed The Oldest Trick in the World, which was Kellogg's first work as a playwright.

She later followed with The Smile of the Cardboard Man and After You've Gone, both of which starred Sylvia Short, who became her lover. Kellogg wrote the book for a musical Skybound, produced by the ASCAP workshop. In 1989, she returned to Santa Barbara with Sylvia Short to live.

Kellogg died from complications of Alzheimer's disease in 2005, aged 83, at her home in Santa Barbara.

All quotes by Marjorie Kellogg:

people like to keep their little secrets to themselves. It's like growing mushrooms in the cellar and running down to take a look at them now and then.

Doctors and nurses seemed to have been born and raised in the hospital, with only short punctuations of absenteeism for such things as schooling and marriage.

For the patient who remained hospitalized a long time, an insidious metamorphosis took place - the outside world dimmed and faded like a watercolor exposed to the sun, while the hospital became the center and the only real part of the universe.

You seldom listen to me, and when you do you don't hear, and when you do hear you hear wrong, and even when you hear right you change it so fast that it's never the same.