collect (front and poet. Raccòrre) v. tr. [Der. to grasp, with pref. ra-] (coniug. how to capture). - 1. Lift, pick up or return from the ground or anything 2.a. Put together, gather, collect: r. money, mite, documents, quotes, examples, topics, news, hints, r. men, soldiers, comrades; b. capture, concentrate in a 3. Bringing together the parts of something wider, open or lying, then tighten together, fold: r. wings, legs, body, sails, rigging, nets. Fig: r. forces, thoughts, r. the mind, concentrate on a thought, in meditation.
That 's what often makes a writer picks up the word.
Nadine Gordimer, who, with his inseparable notebook runs in the South African bush to breathe clouds and words, choosing the most valuable to collect waiting for arrivals, the best in history where plant them and only then, with a little 'melancholy, let them go.
Haruki Murakami, author of the graceful nuances, which can glide with your fingers as a child on the emotions most inaccessible, extending the plan, we see him leaning on the white page waiting to spring forth the will of the people, then collects in small sentences, which remain stranded in his dialogues, as in a jammed roller of an old movie that we can no longer see, even though we love it, goes off immediately because the bitter memory.
Michael Cunningham, who finally breaks down families want to understand, give the reader, caught up in thoughts sharp. They make fun of words and collect, stacked one upon the other, waiting for the reaction of a character who never comes.
Ian McEwan, which defies time, sliced \u200b\u200binto precise words that collects around the character, a pyre ready to catch fire at the stroke of the will of the author.
Collect words, yet never enough.
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