I don't trust anybody that doesn't do good work. I don't give them any credibility. If they can't write, why should I believe anything they have to say?
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I would say readers can trust my work more than anyone else's.
That is the thing about being a writer; your subject matter may not stay your subject matter if you break their trust by revealing personal and editorialized information about them.
I don't trust anyone except a very, very few people.
There's only a handful of people I trust completely, and I know who they are. Other than that, I pretty much don't trust people.
You can't trust very many people.
Do not trust people. They are capable of greatness.
One of the problems of writing is that anyone who commits themselves to that process has to believe that they're good.
There's a unique bond of trust between readers and authors that I don't believe exists in any other art form; as a reader, I trust a novelist to give me his or her best effort, however flawed.
I don't trust a lot of journalists.
As a writer, you have to believe you're one of the best writers in the world. To sit down every day at the typewriter filled with self-doubt is not a good idea.
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