1.
My fictitious characters will take the bit between their teeth and gallop off and do something that I hadn't counted on. However, I always insist on dragging them back to the straight and narrow
Colleen McCullough
2.
Each of us has something within us which won't be denied, even if it makes us scream aloud to die. We are what we are, that's all. Like the old Celtic legend of the bird with the thorn in its breast, singing its heart out and dying. Because it has to, its self-knowledge can't affect or change the outcome, can it? Everyone singing his own little song, convinced it's the most wonderful song the world has ever heard. Don't you see? We create our own thorns, and never stop to count the cost. All we can do is suffer the pain, and tell ourselves it was well worth it.
Colleen McCullough
3.
There's a story... a legend, about a bird that sings just once in its life. From the moment it leaves its nest, it searches for a thorn tree... and never rests until it's found one. And then it sings... more sweetly than any other creature on the face of the earth. And singing, it impales itself on the longest, sharpest thorn. But, as it dies, it rises above its own agony, to outsing the lark and the nightingale. The thorn bird pays its life for just one song, but the whole world stills to listen, and God in his heaven smiles.
Colleen McCullough
4.
I want to know what they look like, their height, and colouring, physique and speech pattens.
Colleen McCullough
5.
There's a hell of a lot of horny people out there who are not being gratified in the way they should be.
Colleen McCullough
6.
There are no ambitions noble enough to justify breaking someone's heart.
Colleen McCullough
7.
If you love people, they kill you. If you need people, they kill you. They do I tell you!
Colleen McCullough
8.
The bird with the thorn in its breast, it follows an immutable law; it is driven by it knows not what to impale itself, and die singing. At the very instant the thorn enters there is no awareness in it of the dying to come; it simply sings and sings until there is not the life left to utter another note. But we, when we put the thorns in our breasts, we know. We understand. And still we do it. Still we do it.
Colleen McCullough
9.
I hate being on my best behavior. It brings out the absolute worst in me.
Colleen McCullough
10.
The Labour Party of today has fits of horrors of the very thought of somebody like me might saying that they bought in white Australia. But I believe they did.
Colleen McCullough
11.
The lovely thing about being forty is that you can appreciate twenty-five-year-old men more.
Colleen McCullough
12.
What was sleep? A blessing, a respite from life, an echo of death, a demanding nuisance?
Colleen McCullough
13.
And gradually his memory slipped a little, as memories do, even those with so much love attached to them; as if there is an unconscious healing process within the mind which mends up in spite of our desperate determination never to forget.
Colleen McCullough
14.
Belief doesn't rest on proof or existence...it rests on faith...without faith there is nothing.
Colleen McCullough
15.
Old age is an ordeal, of flesh and mind. Of winding down, of slowing down, of dying cells. It's accepting the loss of physical attractiveness and replacing it with the power and wisdom that can only come with old age.
Colleen McCullough
16.
That's the purpose of old age... To give us a breathing space before we die, in which to see why we did what we did.
Colleen McCullough
17.
Love and hate are cruel, only liking is kind
Colleen McCullough
18.
When we press the thorn to our chest we know, we understand, and still we do it.
Colleen McCullough
19.
Yet there's something ominous about turning sixty-five. Suddenly old age is not a phenomenon which will occur; it has occurred.
Colleen McCullough
20.
Perfection, in anything, is unbearably dull. Myself, I prefer a touch of imperfection.
Colleen McCullough
21.
Best of all she liked his eyes, such a translucent golden brown, and so laughing.
Colleen McCullough
22.
I have an editor in my head, that's why I can't read Harry Potter, because Rowling is such a lousy writer.
Colleen McCullough
23.
duty, the most indecent of all obsessions, was only another name for love.
Colleen McCullough
24.
Once I've got the first draft down on paper then I do five or six more drafts, the last two of which will be polishing drafts. The ones in between will flesh out the characters and maybe I'll check my research.
Colleen McCullough
25.
I think explicit love scenes are a turn off unless it's the kind you read with one hand.
Colleen McCullough
26.
There is no doubt that it is more difficult to read and more difficult to write but I still manage.
Colleen McCullough
27.
I am writing a sequel to The Touch because I want to further explore the Chinese question that I have raised. There will be more about that in a sequel.
Colleen McCullough
28.
My husband says it is very good that I have very tiny feet, because they're easier to get in my mouth.
Colleen McCullough
29.
How frightening, that one person could mean so much, so many things.
Colleen McCullough
30.
It's no fun to be a bluestocking in a family of jockstraps.
Colleen McCullough
31.
I escaped the torture of my childhood home by reading. To this day it is still one of my greatest pleasures.
Colleen McCullough
32.
..the best is only bought at the cost of great pain...or so says the legend
Colleen McCullough
33.
...she looked like the sort of woman most men would want to get to know because they weren't sure what went on inside.
Colleen McCullough
34.
It's a dead give away of an inexperienced writer if every character speaks with the same voice
Colleen McCullough
35.
Oh, that feels good! I don't know who invented ties and then insisted a man was only properly dressed when he wore one, but if I ever meet him, I'll strangle him with his own invention
Colleen McCullough
36.
Twelve thousand miles of it, to the other side of the world. And whether they came home again or not, they would belong neither here, nor there, for they would have lived on two continents and sampled two different ways of life.
Colleen McCullough
37.
In The Touch, the love scenes are the same as they were in The Thorn Birds or anything else Ive ever written. I find a way of saying that either it was heaven or hell but in a way that still leaves room for the reader to use their own imagination.
Colleen McCullough
38.
We're working-class people, which means we don't get rich or have maids. Be content with what you are and what you have.
Colleen McCullough
39.
My books and other works are my legacy, and it's a great comfort to know that mine is a legacy of pleasure for other people.
Colleen McCullough
40.
... the most insoluble problems are those which by their very nature can have no space within them for dreams.
Colleen McCullough
41.
Truly God was good, to make man so blind.
Colleen McCullough
42.
There was some justice in his pain
Colleen McCullough