Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American writer Helen McCloy.
Last updated on December 18, 2024.
Helen McCloy, pseudonym Helen Clarkson, was an American mystery writer, whose series character Dr. Basil Willing debuted in Dance of Death (1938). Willing believes, that "every criminal leaves psychic fingerprints, and he can't wear gloves to hide them." He appeared in 13 of McCloy's novels and in several of her short stories. McCloy often used the theme of doppelganger, but in the end of the story she showed a psychological or realistic explanation for the seemingly supernatural events.
the unconscious forces that govern accessible memory are the most arbitrary of editors and the absolute masters of our lives.
Even a small, everyday lie is a clue to the personality and preoccupations of the liar, like a dream or any other confection of the mind, that is half-conscious and half-unconscious, as all creative acts must be.
Money is an acquired taste. But, once acquired, it becomes an addiction.
There's always trouble in the Middle East. I can't recall any time in my life when there hasn't been trouble there.
Privacy is like sleep - something you don't appreciate until you have to go without it.
That's the worst thing about money - the moment you have some you begin to suspect everyone of trying to take it away from you. And usually they are.
A critic is a person who rationalizes his likes and dislikes in such impressive language that the layman thinks he is reasoning instead of rationalizing.
... law is a substitute for love.
most of our social and educational institutions are designed to weed out or make over people ... until we produce a world where everyone is a smart, quick-witted, aggressive person living on the surface of the mind without ever looking into the depths.
the fool is the one true cosmopolite - the one character common to all nationalities.
Thunderstorms were rare in California, but when they came they were, like most things in California, larger than life.
Habit is far stronger than the lessons of experience.
the old ploy of the powerful: never refuse when you can confuse. Distraction and delay are always better than obstruction.
Wouldn't it be kinder to say that a lie is a short work of fiction? 'A story' as my daughter says?
what you fear, you invite.
That's the one thing a politician mustn't have - political opinions or principles. He can have prejudices - indeed he must have prejudices and share all the popular political superstitions of the moment as ardently as he can. But he must not have principles. He must never let the people suspect that they cannot eat their cake and have it. He must promise them a defense program and a higher standard of living. He must never use that dreadful little word or.
money is an acquired taste that grows as it is fed.
Were modern cities only beautiful after darkness hid everything but their lights?
Nobody believes in ghosts, but everybody is afraid of them.
The experiences of the heartless are so limited. It is hate that is blind. Love may miss a flaw here and there, but hate misses beauty everywhere.
Everything you do in war is a crime in peace
In a city you thought of all life as human life. You had to live in the heart of the woods to realize that humanity was a slight ripple on the surface of a flood of life that seeped into every vacant crack, flowed into every biological vacuum the moment it occurred.
Falling in love is like religious conversion. It goes on for a long time below the threshold before it reaches consciousness.
Civilization is a fiction which becomes a fact only as long as everyone can believe in it. It is the cynic, rather than the rebel, who pulls down the whole flimsy structure periodically throughout history.
Other people's children, like other people's love affairs, were so much less interesting than one's own.
To the Latin, cynicism and middle age are synonymous. Look at our politicians - they move through their careers from left to center to right, like the hands of a clock.
Every criminal leaves psychic fingerprints. And he can't wear gloves to hide them.
At twenty your choices are almost unlimited. At fifty you're a prisoner of past decisions. At seventy you have no free will left at all.
fiction and lies are both works of creative art, and creation always reveals the creator.
The author portrays himself in every line he writes and portrayal is always betrayal.