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Oprah Winfrey
Entertainment Executive
Oprah Winfrey: Well, I loved books so much as a child. They were my outlet to the world. And I still do. People ask me, "What do you do in your spare time?" That's what I do -- I read. There are so many books. I went through a period of Lois Lensky books. She wrote Strawberry Girl, and lots of stories about these little peasant children. I went through a period where I wanted to be them. I would read the character, and whichever book I was reading, that's who I wanted to be that week. I read a book in the third grade about Katie John, who hated boys, and she had freckles. Well Lord knows, I'm not going to have freckles, no way, no how. But I tried to put some on. And I went through my "Katie John" phase. I think the book that moved me most when I was growing up was A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. I had a tree in my backyard, too, so I identified with her. I just thought, "Well, this is my life." And then I discovered Maya Angelou's I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. Well, first of all, it was the first time I had ever encountered another woman who had been sexually abused. I could not imagine. I felt that way, too, when I read The Color Purple. I read the first page of The Color Purple, put the book down, and wept. I could not believe it, that someone had put this in writing. It was unbelievable. View Interview with Oprah Winfrey View Biography of Oprah Winfrey View Profile of Oprah Winfrey View Photo Gallery of Oprah Winfrey
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Oprah Winfrey
Entertainment Executive
I thought of The Color Purple for myself. I know this is going to sound strange to you. I read the book. I got so many copies of that book. I passed the book around the everybody I knew. If I was on a bus, I'd pass it out to people. And when I heard that there was going to be a movie, I started talking it up for myself. I didn't know Quincy Jones or Steven Spielberg, or how on earth I would get in this movie. I'd never acted in my life. But I felt it so intensely that I had to be a part of that movie. I really do believe that I created it for myself. I wanted it more than anything in the world, and would have done anything to do it, anything to do it. View Interview with Oprah Winfrey View Biography of Oprah Winfrey View Profile of Oprah Winfrey View Photo Gallery of Oprah Winfrey
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Oprah Winfrey
Entertainment Executive
What I know is, is that if you do work that you love and work the fulfills you, the rest will come. And that, I truly believe that the reason I've been able to be so financially successful is because my focus has never, ever for one minute been money. And the fact that the money has come has really surprised me. I've been just really surprised and delighted and very pleased, and at many times overwhelmed by it. But the money has never been the focus. You know you are on the road to success if you would do your job, and not be paid for it. And I would do this job, and take on a second job to make ends meet if nobody paid me. Just for the opportunity to do it. That's how you know you are doing the right thing. View Interview with Oprah Winfrey View Biography of Oprah Winfrey View Profile of Oprah Winfrey View Photo Gallery of Oprah Winfrey
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Tom Wolfe
America's Master Novelist
In high school, there was a course in the sophomore year of high school in rhetoric. And I'm talking about rigorous rhetoric: the use of figures of speech, figura sententiae, and tropes, and all these technical names, and training in the three or four ways that you can arrange a paragraph. I don't think any of this happens any longer. Parsing sentences, which is a fading art. These diagrams of sentences, so you find out how all the different parts fit together. This was amazingly good training. Then in college, I went to Washington and Lee in Virginia, there was a young professor -- it never dawned on me 'til later that he was probably only four or five years older than me -- who had come to Washington and Lee from the American Studies program at Yale. That's where he had gotten his doctorate. And this course was so exciting that I was determined to do what he had done, which was to go to Yale in American Studies, which I did. View Interview with Tom Wolfe View Biography of Tom Wolfe View Profile of Tom Wolfe View Photo Gallery of Tom Wolfe
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Bob Woodward
Investigative Reporter
Bob Woodward: If somebody came from Mars to America and went around for months or years, and then you asked them who has the best jobs, they would say the journalists, because the journalists get to make momentary entries into people's lives when they are interesting, and get out when they cease to be interesting. And most jobs, if you are a lawyer or a doctor, you have to deal with clients, patients who have boring problems or diseases that are routine, and of course, the definition of "news" is "non-routine." What's going on in the town -- in culture, in the nation, in the world -- is news, and you get to work on that. View Interview with Bob Woodward View Biography of Bob Woodward View Profile of Bob Woodward View Photo Gallery of Bob Woodward
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