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John Banville Quotes - IQDb - Internet Quotes Database

Quotes from John Banville


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The Booker Prize is a big, popular prize for big, popular books, and that's the way it should be.


The effect of prizes on one's career - if that is what to call it - is considerable, since they give one more clout with publishers and more notoriety among journalists. The effect on one's writing, however, is nil - otherwise, one would be in deep trouble.


I know some of my memories are made up and they are far more powerful than the things that actually happened. For example, I always remember my brother posting me a copy of 'Dubliners' from Africa, but he says he never did.


My work is frequently described as cold, which is baffling, since it seems to me embarrassingly, shame-makingly, scandalously warm. I find my work filled with sentiment, and I can't imagine why people find it cold.


I've been wrestling with Kafka since I was an adolescent. I think he's a great aphorist, a great letter writer, a great diarist, a great short story writer, and a great novelist - I'd put novelist last.


I suppose it's possible that a writer would have feeling for his characters, but I can't see how, because writing is such a meticulous, intricate, technical business. I wish I could say that I love my characters and that frequently they take over the book and run away with the plot and so on. But they don't exist.


Office life is very, very strange. It's like no other way of living. You have an intimacy with people who you work with in the office, yet if you meet them on the streets, you both look the other way because you're embarrassed.


When fans of mine meet me, I can see the disappointment in their eyes. Every artist knows of this phenomenon.


We think we're living in the present, but we're really living in the past.


The novel is resilient, and so are novelists.


When I say I don't like my own work, that doesn't mean it isn't better than everyone else's.


Life is tragic but it's equally comic.


In my books you have to concentrate, but I work hard to make it that, when you do, the rewards are quite high.


If I was asked to say what was the greatest invention of human beings, I would say the sentence.


I'm a hopeless 19th-century romantic.


I would be far more critical than any reviewer could be of my own work. So I simply don't read them.


I think I'm less the writer than I'm the written.


I don't make a distinction between men and women. To me they are just people.


I am the worst judge of my books.


Dostoevsky is such a bad writer it is hard to take him seriously as a novelist, though he is a wonderful philosopher.