Top 25 K. A. Applegate Quotes

Words matter. These are the best K. A. Applegate Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.

I live in a high-rise apartment building, so I just hav

I live in a high-rise apartment building, so I just have two cats. They’re both pound kitties. One of them, Dick, is an evil, foot-biting cat. When I write a tiger morph, I’m always imagining Dick.
K. A. Applegate
I hope kids feel gratitude for what they do have.
K. A. Applegate
I love any excuse to come to New York – when it’s not February.
K. A. Applegate
I think having imaginary friends is an amazing coping mechanism. It’s pretty wonderful, and it makes a lot of sense to me.
K. A. Applegate
Stan is a rescue Chihuahua mix. He was the role model for Bob, the dog in ‘Ivan.’ The drawings in the book look precisely like Stan.
K. A. Applegate
It occurred to me that a food drive would be a natural way to talk to kids about hunger, which so many of them simply aren’t aware of.
K. A. Applegate
At the end of the day, I’d love to see children stop begging their parents to go to the circus. That’s what would make me most happy.
K. A. Applegate
I think most writers will say that at the start of each book they think, ‘I’m not sure I can do this.’ But eventually, you reach a magical point where the story suddenly becomes real to you, and you become totally invested in it.
K. A. Applegate
I think younger readers connect so readily to animal characters because they share a certain vulnerability, particularly when it comes to adult humans, who can be a rather unpredictable lot.
K. A. Applegate
One of the reasons I love writing for middle graders, besides their voracious appetite for books, is their deep concern for fairness and morality.
K. A. Applegate
When I was a child, going to a circus with wild animal acts was a rite of passage. These days, it’s an act of complicit cruelty.
K. A. Applegate
We know about the socially complex lives of elephants: how they communicate, how they bond, how they even seem to grieve. We have ethologists in the field and activists on the ground to thank for that knowledge.
K. A. Applegate
Hunger and homelessness aren’t things we always want to talk about.
K. A. Applegate
What do we lose without wild animal acts at the circus? Absolutely nothing, except the opportunity to be haunted and heartbroken.
K. A. Applegate
I was sure I wanted to grow up to be either a veterinarian or a writer. In fact, I worked for a vet during high school, doing everything from cleaning cages to assisting in surgery.
K. A. Applegate
As a species, we can at times be dimwitted and cruel. But we’re also capable of learning.
K. A. Applegate
I grew up with a menagerie of dogs, cats, gerbils – not to mention three younger siblings.
K. A. Applegate
I grew up in an affluent suburban world and never worried about money until I’d grown up and found wonderfully original ways to screw up my life.
K. A. Applegate
I tend to write short, brief snippets – I lean toward the chamber music end as opposed to the symphony end of things.
K. A. Applegate
I think we have a real obligation when we do have animals in captivity to understand their needs and to care for them as well as we can.
K. A. Applegate
That penetrating gaze, that intelligence; it’s hard not to be anthropomorphic when you’re looking at a great ape – at any primate – but especially with gorillas. They’re just so magnificent.
K. A. Applegate
I hate to witness animals in captivity – or see circus elephants paraded down the streets. When animals are caged, it’s a loss of what they are.
K. A. Applegate
I think all writers write from the time they’re really young, and you just start asking the question, ‘What if?’
K. A. Applegate
When we have financial struggles, kids are so much more aware of things than we want them to be.
K. A. Applegate
Gorillas may seem terrifying because of their bodies, but they are really magnificent and very gentle.
K. A. Applegate