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Alan Hollinghurst Quotes

English novelist, Birth: 26-5-1954
1.
The worse they are the more they see beauty in each other.
Alan Hollinghurst

2.
I think being an only child created in me a degree of self-reliance, which I'm glad of. It made me perfectly happy with my own company and perhaps was good conditioning for the protracted solitude of writing books as slowly as I do.
Alan Hollinghurst

3.
I like things to reverberate, to be suggestive.
Alan Hollinghurst

4.
What the problem was was this colossal redundancy, the squandering of brilliant technique on cheap material.
Alan Hollinghurst

5.
The great wisdom for writers, perhaps for everybody, is to come to understand to be at one with their own tempo.
Alan Hollinghurst

Similar Authors: Mark Twain C. S. Lewis Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Haruki Murakami Ayn Rand Charles Dickens George Eliot Albert Camus Kurt Vonnegut Victor Hugo Chuck Palahniuk Margaret Atwood Virginia Woolf Ernest Hemingway George R. R. Martin
6.
I was rather a goody-goody as a child... It was only later on I discovered that you could be naughty and get away with it.
Alan Hollinghurst

7.
Now that I had actually made love, more astonishingly now that I had been made love to, the fantasies were subtly undermined.
Alan Hollinghurst

8.
...all his longings came out as a kind of disdain for what he longed for.
Alan Hollinghurst

Quote Topics by Alan Hollinghurst: Book Writing Children Wanted Kind Noise People Made Problem Naughty Half Great Wisdom Worst Apologizing Unconditional Love Disdain Longing Feelings Fantasy Technique Get Away Brilliant Faces Tempo Boring Compliment
9.
He wanted pure compliments, just as he wanted unconditional love.
Alan Hollinghurst

10.
To apologize for what you most wanted to do, to concede that it was obnoxious, boring, 'vulgar and unsafe' --- that was the worst thing.
Alan Hollinghurst

11.
she kept sliding down, in small half-willing surrenders, till she was a heap, with the book held tiringly above her face.
Alan Hollinghurst

12.
There was the noise itself, which he thought of vaguely as the noise of classical music, sameish and rhetorical, full of feelings people surely never had
Alan Hollinghurst