Top 136 Quotes & Sayings by Anthony Horowitz

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English novelist Anthony Horowitz.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Anthony Horowitz

Anthony John Horowitz, is an English novelist and screenwriter specialising in mystery and suspense.

I have a great belief in not doing anything unless I'm passionate about it.
Do I believe in the devil? I don't believe in a figure with horns and a tail.
You don't need to be able to string a sentence together in a way that is elegant or even vaguely meaningful to produce a bestseller - as Dan Brown has demonstrated time and again.
If you look at Charles Dickens's time, there were so many different levels of society and everybody understood their place in it, it was that complex and simple. I'm not sure we have that now.
My writing has always been what you call 'narrative fiction' in the sense that it's got very strong plots and twists at the end. — © Anthony Horowitz
My writing has always been what you call 'narrative fiction' in the sense that it's got very strong plots and twists at the end.
It's hard to write when you think every sentence is going to be read by a million kids.
I'm not very good at creating worlds. I prefer to write about the world as it is.
I love writing different things.
My father was aloof, very strange and very distant.
If my children were as unhappy as I was at school, I'd send them somewhere else, but it never occurred to my parents.
I'm a private victim of a peculiar household.
You like to think with young adults that with your books, a little part of it has reached them and will stay with them. It is great to be part of an eight-year-old's world.
My perfect reader doesn't just read - he or she devours books.
Relationships between writers and publishers are of course very strange and change all the time, rather like a see-saw.
I'm not happy unless I have a pen in my hand, it's really that simple. — © Anthony Horowitz
I'm not happy unless I have a pen in my hand, it's really that simple.
Authors have odd relationships with their creations They owe their fame and fortune to their characters but feel enslaved by them.
Sometimes I think the family I was brought up in was 100 years out of date.
Until he lost all his money, my father was a successful north London Jewish businessman. He was unusual among his immediate family in that he was enormously cultured and had an incredible library.
Throughout history, story telling was at the very beginning of life.
I enjoy scaring people.
I start work at 7 A.M. and write all day, seven days a week. If I don't write, I can't sleep.
I'm not a huge fan of prequels and sequels and the cynical rush to make money on the back of books by other writers who are now dead.
My greatest fear is disappointing the reader, so each book has to be better than the one before.
Everywhere, publishers are being squeezed out.
My wife, Jill, and I have an incredibly close working relationship, and an incredibly happy married one. We met through work. I was the world's worst advertising copywriter. She had the misfortune to be my account director, so from the very start she was my boss, and she still is.
Writing about magic is harder than writing about spies because you're dealing with something that doesn't really exist.
My favourite part of writing a book is thinking up the ideas, and that can start a long time before I actually sit down at my desk.
I love the idea that magic and witchcraft and battles between supernatural creatures could be raging all around us but just out of our sight.
I had three brilliant English teachers at secondary school. They found the writer in me.
As a children's author, reviewers are generally very nice to you. I only ever wrote one adult book and received such a kicking for it that I was in trauma for the next six months.
I fear dying in the middle of a book. It would be so annoying to write 80,000 words and not get to the end. I'm phobic about it. So when I'm writing a book I leave messages all over the house for people to know how the story ends, and then someone can finish it for me.
A children's author on a soapbox is not a pleasant sight but I have become drawn into issues, slightly unwillingly, relating to young people, literacy and youth justice: just look at the number of young people we have locked up in prison, and the uselessness of it.
With every year that passes, I get further away from my target audience, and while I've been happy to think of myself as a father figure to these kids, I'd be a little distressed to be thought of as a grandfather figure.
I feel very privileged to have reached so many kids because a life without stories, without the power of books, would be a very grey world, it's good to add colour.
I didn't really have a favourite subject at school as I was useless at everything.
My generation has left the globe in a mess.
It is, of course, traditional in children's literature to get rid of the parents.
I vividly remember being 14. That was the age when I started to get happy: I started being a writer and stopped being a loser.
If you are going to be a writer, you have to have self-belief, every writer gets rejections, they say the difference between a successful and unsuccessful writer is an unsuccessful writer gives up, if you keep going you will succeed.
There's something very strange about Sherlock Holmes, especially if you're an English schoolboy. When you read the stories, they stay with you forever. — © Anthony Horowitz
There's something very strange about Sherlock Holmes, especially if you're an English schoolboy. When you read the stories, they stay with you forever.
I believe that, by and large, people are good and everybody you meet is more likely to surprise you in a positive way than in a negative way.
I'm not good at the modern world.
I do believe quite strongly in evil.
I don't really like the word 'hobbies.'
I don't think my father was a bad man, all in all.
Once you get into the world of dystopia, it's hard to avoid plagiarism, because other people have had such powerful visions.
No writer can really sustain two huge - I hate the word 'franchises.'
There's a name for people with an interest in the moon," Alex said. "They're called lunatics.
You're never too young to die.
Inside every fat man, there's a thin man trying to get out. — © Anthony Horowitz
Inside every fat man, there's a thin man trying to get out.
Statues lined the stairs and stood, dotted across the roof. But they had been brutalized by time and the weather. Some were missing arms. Many had no faces. Once they had been saints and angels. Two hundred years standing in London had turned them into cripples.
When the doorbell rings at three in the morning, it's never good news.
"I think my reputation will look after itself," Holmes said. "If they hang me, Watson, I shall leave it to you to persuade your readers that the whole thing was a misunderstanding."
There's a dream world that we visit sometimes and that's how we found out who we are.
Childhood, after all, is the first precious coin that poverty steals from a child.
All that sadness. All that anger. It is the smoke that gets into your eyes. If you do not blow it away, how can you hope to see?
A German philosopher once wrote that he who fights monsters must take care that he doesn't become one himself.
You can kiss me if you like," she said. Alex let go of her and turned away. "Thanks, Fiona," he said. "But frankly I'd prefer to kiss the horse.
We live in an age when there is no room for the impossible.
You cannot defeat your enemies until you know who they are.
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