Best quotes by Kate Atkinson on Me

Checkout quotes by Kate Atkinson on Me

  • I did feel when my mother died if anyone was going to haunt me it would be her. And she hasn't, so I think it is possibly the end.
    - Kate Atkinson
  • Not being published would be great. When I say that to other writers they look at me as if I'm totally insane.
    - Kate Atkinson
  • Probably not needing to be published would give me more time to think about a book.
    - Kate Atkinson
  • I don't want to spoil the magic, but it's a very curious thing that honestly baffles me. It's the nearest we'll ever get to playing God, to suddenly produce these fully formed creatures. It is a bit odd. Other aspects you work out more - you rework sentences, you rework imagery. But not characters.
    - Kate Atkinson
  • My father was an autodidact. It wasn't a middle-class house. Shopkeepers are aspirant. He paid for me to go to private school. He was denied an education - he had a horrible childhood. He got a place at a grammar school and wasn't allowed to go.
    - Kate Atkinson
  • It was failing part of my Ph.D. that led me into novel-writing. By then I was 29, had remarried and had a second baby. It struck me that I'd lost my path in life and I felt frustrated. That's when I started to write.
    - Kate Atkinson
  • I had a novel in the back of my mind when I won an Ian St James story competition in 1993. At the award ceremony an agent asked me if I was writing a novel. I showed her four or five chapters of what would become 'Behind the Scenes at the Museum' and to my surprise she auctioned them off.
    - Kate Atkinson
  • Because I write fiction, I don't write autobiography, and to me they are very different things. The first-person narrative is a very intimate thing, but you are not addressing other people as 'I' - you are inhabiting that 'I.'
    - Kate Atkinson
  • Alternate history fascinates me, as it fascinates all novelists, because 'What if?' is the big thing.
    - Kate Atkinson
  • Writing for me is quite a plastic form, a kind of mental sculpture, although that sounds weird. It acquires its character and its depth as it goes along.
    - Kate Atkinson