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Life & Wisdom Quote by Quentin Crisp

"An autobiography is an obituary in serial form with the last installment missing"

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Crisp’s line lands like a martini-dry toast: elegant, amused, and faintly cruel. Calling an autobiography “an obituary in serial form” flips the genre’s promise. Instead of a heroic self-portrait, he frames it as preemptive memorialization - a curated set of “installments” that tidy up a life into digestible chapters, each one a little death of spontaneity. The punchline is the “last installment missing”: the only chapter that would make the narrative honest is the one the author can’t write, because death refuses collaboration. The joke is structural, not just morbid; it exposes the autobiographer’s impossible job of finishing a story that is, by definition, unfinished until it’s over.

The subtext is Crisp’s lifelong skepticism about respectability and public mythmaking. As an openly gay English writer who survived decades when flamboyance was treated as deviance, he understood that “life story” often means “defense brief.” Autobiography becomes a way to seize the pen before society writes your obituary for you. Yet he doesn’t romanticize that power. Even self-authorship is a kind of embalming: you select, arrange, polish, and quietly omit.

The line also needles our hunger for completion. Readers want an arc - redemption, lesson, closure. Crisp reminds us that closure is a literary convenience, not a human one. Autobiography sells the comfort of an ending while smuggling in its central absence.

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TopicWitty One-Liners
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Autobiography as Serial Obituary - Quentin Crisp
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Quentin Crisp

Quentin Crisp (December 25, 1908 - November 21, 1999) was a Writer from England.

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