Words matter. These are the best Voracious Quotes from famous people such as Ajith Kumar, Lara Dutta, Eric Allin Cornell, Amish Tripathi, Wes Craven, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I don’t want to put up this act of being a voracious reader, which I am not.
I have been a voracious reader.
My head was always bubbling over with facts and it seems to me this had little to do with my paying close attention in school and more to do with my voracious and omnivorous reading habits.
I am a voracious reader, so it’s difficult for me to give a list of my favourite authors of all time.
My whole background was in voracious book-reading.
I’m a voracious reader. What that does is keep your mind fresh and active and hearing different voices and different styles. TV can be derivative, and if you just watch TV, you’re not widening the circle.
I read a great deal as a child. A lot of children go through a phase of reading in a literally voracious way. It is their primary imaginative activity. Maybe that’s an experience which is not so common any more with the presence of television in every home.
I’m a voracious reader. I want information, all kinds – Internet, books, magazines.
As a business consultant, I am a voracious reader of self-help books, case studies of thriving companies, and the biographies and autobiographies of the world’s most successful people. I relentlessly implement the best ideas into my businesses.
I’m a voracious reader, I’m always studying.
When I was a teenager, I was a voracious reader of crime fiction, but only contemporary books. I was not interested in reading ‘The Glass Key’ or ‘The Maltese Falcon’ – stuff that was 40 or 50 years old.
I’m a voracious reader.
I consume a lot of podcasts. I’m a voracious podcast consumer.
I’m a voracious reader. I also have a ton of favorite TV shows I’m addicted to.
I like buying drones, hover boards, 360-degree cameras and fabulous cars. I am a little bit like a boy. I also spend a lot on books. I am a voracious reader, and I love vintage stores and first editions.
When I was little, I was a voracious reader, and that really led me to acting as well. I loved being transported into someone else’s life, and that’s what reading provided me. I also really love to entertain people.
Fortunately, I grew up in a traditional family where questioning was encouraged, particularly by my pandit grandfather. We are all voracious readers, seeking knowledge. I learn a lot from discussions with my wife, siblings and parents.
‘Wicked’ has such a wild fan base – like, a voracious fan base.
I really enjoy tech, but I’m not voracious – I’ll find stuff because I want to use it, not because I’m interested in what’s out there. It’s a sort of necessity relationship.
I’m so voracious with books, movies, TV, and I’m always interested in the way that different cultural values are presented or, in their absence, are present.
By the end of the nineteenth century, the stereotype of the ugly American – voracious, preachy, mercenary, and bombastically chauvinist – was firmly in place in Europe.
I was taught a lot of Bible at home and had a voracious appetite for reading the Bible.
I get bored very easily. I have a voracious appetite and I do not feel alive if I’m repeating something I’m good at. So I’m always looking for new challenges.
I’ve always been a voracious reader.
I’m a voracious reader, and I like to explore all sorts of writing without prejudice and without paying any attention to labels, conventions or silly critical fads.
President Kennedy was a voracious reader and was forever coming up with fascinating bits of information.
While I was a voracious movie-goer as a boy, I never put writing and films together in my mind.
I got Cs in English at school. I hated it. But now I want to be a writer and I’m voracious for new vocabulary and new ideas.
I teach 18- to 21-year-olds – the ‘Harry Potter’ generation. They grew up as voracious readers, reading books in this exploding genre. But at some point, I would love for them to give Umberto Eco or A.S. Byatt a try. I hope ‘A Discovery of Witches’ will serve as a kind of stepping-stone.
One of the things I love, and I’m a voracious reader as well as a writer, is books that surprise me, that are not predictable.
My dad was a voracious news consumer. I remember just sitting with my family all the time. I would sit on his lap and read the paper with him. He would read it to me.
I loved history in my school days, and I have always been a voracious reader. But in India, you end up doing MBA, engineering or medicine.
Like most lit nerds, I’m a voracious reader. I never got enough poetry under my belt growing up but I do read it – some of my favorites, Gina Franco and Angela Shaw and Cornelius Eady and Kevin Young, remind me daily that unless the words sing and dance, what’s the use of putting them down on paper.
I can still remember my mum (a voracious, if not discriminating, reader – I have seen everything from the sublime to the ridiculous by her bed, from Ian Rankin and Elmore Leonard to Barbara Cartland and James Patterson) taking me to get my library card when I was four and not yet at school.
I think it’s a fallacy to say that a good book sells itself. It doesn’t happen. I’m a voracious reader and I can give you a long list of books which should have been best sellers but they aren’t. How can you buy a book if you haven’t heard of it?