Top 82 Quotes & Sayings by Edna O'Brien

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an Irish novelist Edna O'Brien.
Last updated on December 25, 2024.
Edna O'Brien

Josephine Edna O'Brien is an Irish novelist, memoirist, playwright, poet and short-story writer. Philip Roth described her as "the most gifted woman now writing in English", while a former President of Ireland, Mary Robinson, cited her as "one of the great creative writers of her generation".

Writers really live in the mind and in hotels of the soul.
I am obsessive, also I am industrious. Besides, the time when you are most alive and most aware is in childhood and one is trying to recapture that heightened awareness.
My hand does the work and I don't have to think; in fact, were I to think, it would stop the flow. It's like a dam in the brain that bursts. — © Edna O'Brien
My hand does the work and I don't have to think; in fact, were I to think, it would stop the flow. It's like a dam in the brain that bursts.
In every question and every remark tossed back and forth between lovers who have not played out the last fugue, there is one question and it is this: 'Is there someone new?'
The vote means nothing to women. We should be armed.
Countries are either mothers or fathers, and engender the emotional bristle secretly reserved for either sire.
Recollection is not something that I can summon up, it simply comes and I am the servant of it.
I have some women friends but I prefer men. Don't trust women. There is a built-in competition between women.
I'm an Irish Catholic and I have a long iceberg of guilt.
Writing is like carrying a fetus.
You have to be lonely to be a writer
I have always espoused chastity except when one can no longer resist the temptation.
Money talks, but tell me why all it says is just Goodbye. — © Edna O'Brien
Money talks, but tell me why all it says is just Goodbye.
It's not the vote women need, we should be armed.
Promiscuity is the death of love.
When anyone asks me about the Irish character, I say look at the trees. Maimed, stark and misshapen, but ferociously tenacious.
I have some women friends but I prefer men. Dont trust women. There is a built-in competition between women.
Writers, however mature and wise and eminent, are children at heart.
Life, after all, was a secret with the self. The more one gave out, the less there remained for the center--that center which she coveted for herself and recognized instantly in others. Fruits had it, the very heart of, say, a cherry, where the true worth and flavor lay. Some of course were flawed or hollow in there. Many, in fact.
Writing is the product of a deeply disturbed psyche, and by no means therapeutic.
IT WAS TESS who told me about the crowd going to the all-night dance. We'd been school friends. We'd picked mushrooms and pretended to have seen a big ship. She had got married since I went away; it was a made match, a man from the midlands, a Donal, who had worked in a garage but took to farming, out all day, draining fields and callows so that he could till them and sow corn.
what makes us so afraid is the thing we half see, or half hear, as in a wood at dusk, when a tree stump becomes an animal and a sound becomes a siren. And most of that fear is the fear of not knowing, of not actually seeing correctly.
never forget this moment, the hum of the bee, the saffron threads of the flower, the drawn blinds, nature's assiduousness and human cruelty.
August is a wicked month.
it is not good to repudiate the dead because then they do not leave you alone, they are like dogs that bark intermittently at night.
I was lonelier than I should be, for a woman in love, or half in love.
Ideally I'd like to spend two evenings a week talking to Proust and another conversing with the Holy Ghost.
For me to write I have to be, a, alone, and b, know that nobody is going to question me. I write the way a thief steals; it's a little covert.
I am not kind, I cut people off as with shears and I drop them like nettles.
In a way Winter is the real Spring - the time when the inner things happen, the resurgence of nature.
Love . . . is like nature, but in reverse; first it fruits, then it flowers, then it seems to wither, then it goes deep, deep down into its burrow, where no one sees it, where it is lost from sight, and ultimately people die with that secret buried inside their souls.
Ordinary life bypassed me, but I also bypassed it. It couldn't have been any other way.Conventional life and conventional people are not for me.
It is increasingly clear that the fate of the universe will come to depend more and more on individuals as the bungling of bureaucracy permeates every corner of our existence.
We hide the truer part of ourselves when we love.
To live with the work and the letters of James Joyce was an enormous privilege and a daunting education. Yes, I came to admire Joyce even more because he never ceased working, those words and the transubstantiation of words obsessed him. He was a broken man at the end of his life, unaware that Ulysses would be the number one book of the twentieth century and, for that matter, the twenty-first.
fear is a dreadful drawback because it stops us living in the moment.
...people liking you or not liking you is an accident and is to do with them and not you. That goes for love too, only more so.
She said the reason that love is so painful is that it always amounts to two people wanting more than two people can give. — © Edna O'Brien
She said the reason that love is so painful is that it always amounts to two people wanting more than two people can give.
In every question and every remark tossed back and forth between lovers who have not played out the last fugue, there is one question and it is this: Is there someone new?
What we forgot as children is that our parents are children, also. The child in them has not been satisfied or met or loved, often.
Books everywhere. On the shelves and on the small space above the rows of books and all along the floor and under chairs, books that I have read, books that I have not read.
literature is the last banquet between minds.
I crossed the room, and what you did was to feel my hair over and over again and in different ways, touch it, with the palm of your hand... felt it, strands of hair, with your fingers, touched it as if it were cloth, the way a child touches its favorite surfaces.
... we have so many voices in us, how do we know which ones to obey?
Cities, in many ways, are the best repositories for a love affair. You are in a forest or a cornfield, you are walking by the seashore, footprint after footprint of trodden sand, and somehow the kiss or the spoken covenant gets lost in the vastness and indifference of nature. In a city there are places to remind us of what has been.
Irish? In truth I would not want to be anything else. It is a state of mind as well as an actual country. It is being at odds withother nationalities, having quite different philosophy about pleasure, about punishment, about life, and about death. At least it does not leave one pusillanimous.
We all leave one another. We die, we change - it's mostly change - we outgrow our best friends; but even if I do leave you, I will have passed on to you something of myself; you will be a different person because of knowing me; it's inescapable.
Sometimes one word can recall a whole span of life. — © Edna O'Brien
Sometimes one word can recall a whole span of life.
I always want to be in love, always. It's like being a tuning fork.
Kindness. The most unkind thing of all.
There was I, devouring books and yet allowing a man who had never read a book to walk me home for a bit of harmless fumbling on the front steps.
In our deepest moments we say the most inadequate things.
When something has been perfect, there is a tendency to try hard to repeat it.
All my life I had feared imprisonment, the nun's cell, the hospital bed, the places where one faced the self without distraction, without the crutches of other people.
There are times when the thing we are seeing changes before our very eyes, and if it is a landscape we praise nature, and if it is celestial we invoke God, but if it is a loved one who defects, we excuse ourselves and say we have to be somewhere and are already late for our next appointment. We do not stay to put pennies over the half-dead eyes.
I did not sleep. I never do when I am over-happy, over-unhappy, or in bed with a strange man.
History is said to be written by the victors. Fiction, by contrast, is largely the work of injured bystanders.
... a country encapsulates our childhood and those lanes, byres, fields, flowers, insects, suns, moons and stars are forever reoccurring.
Irish Catholicism is very much founded on the stone of fear and of punishment.
After that dark woman you search for someone who will fit into the irregular corners of your heart.
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