"I imagine a child. That child is me. I can reconstruct and vividly remember portions of my own childhood. I can see, taste, smell, feel, and hear them. Then what I do is not write about that kid or about his world, but start to think of a book that would have pleased him"
About this Quote
That pivot carries the real intent. Pinkwater frames childhood less as subject matter than as a benchmark for artistic integrity. Adults are experts at narrativizing kids, turning them into symbols of innocence, trauma, resilience, whatever the market is buying. He’s suspicious of that. Writing "about" the child risks condescension, a kind of anthropological gaze where the adult author translates childhood for other adults. Writing "for" the child - specifically, for the child he remembers in his own body - is a way of dodging that trap. It’s a vow against talking down.
The subtext is almost consumerist in the best sense: the book has to pass the toughest focus group imaginable, a reader with zero patience for moralizing and a hair-trigger detector for boredom. Pinkwater’s context matters here: his work is known for oddball humor and unruly imagination. This method explains why. He’s not trying to preserve a lost world; he’s trying to build the sort of world a kid would willingly enter, then refuse to leave.
Quote Details
| Topic | Writing |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Pinkwater, Daniel. (2026, February 16). I imagine a child. That child is me. I can reconstruct and vividly remember portions of my own childhood. I can see, taste, smell, feel, and hear them. Then what I do is not write about that kid or about his world, but start to think of a book that would have pleased him. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-imagine-a-child-that-child-is-me-i-can-119735/
Chicago Style
Pinkwater, Daniel. "I imagine a child. That child is me. I can reconstruct and vividly remember portions of my own childhood. I can see, taste, smell, feel, and hear them. Then what I do is not write about that kid or about his world, but start to think of a book that would have pleased him." FixQuotes. February 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-imagine-a-child-that-child-is-me-i-can-119735/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I imagine a child. That child is me. I can reconstruct and vividly remember portions of my own childhood. I can see, taste, smell, feel, and hear them. Then what I do is not write about that kid or about his world, but start to think of a book that would have pleased him." FixQuotes, 16 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-imagine-a-child-that-child-is-me-i-can-119735/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.





