Claire Tomalin Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy the top 78 famous quotes, sayings and quotations by Claire Tomalin.
Famous Quotes By Claire Tomalin
'Words and Music' on Radio 3 is always a treat. Actors read passages of poetry and prose interspersed with music, and nobody tells you what it is. Later you can look it up online, but at the time you can't cheat. — Claire Tomalin
I've been trying to garden all my life - it just happens that I haven't had a big garden until the past few years. — Claire Tomalin
It's an odd situation: I could not write about someone for whom I felt no affection or admiration. — Claire Tomalin
I think it's about as likely Jane Austen was gay as that she was found out to be a man. — Claire Tomalin
Poetry was one of the things that interested me most as I was growing up. I used to write it in my head all the time. I still think the very greatest pleasure in life is to write a poem. — Claire Tomalin
Because my father is French, my first school was the Lycee Francais de Londres in Kensington. — Claire Tomalin
Dickens had more energy than anyone in the world, and he expected his sons to be like him, and they couldn't be. — Claire Tomalin
When I kept a diary, I realised that it was all moanings and depression, and I think that is quite common. — Claire Tomalin
I've behaved badly in my life. I hope I haven't behaved as badly as Dickens! In a way, if you're a woman, you're not in a position to behave as badly, because you don't have the economic power. — Claire Tomalin
He saw the world more vividly than other people, and reacted to what he saw with laughter, horror, indignation, and sometimes sobs. — Claire Tomalin
He could take on anything and everything, it seemed, rather than leave himself time to reflect on his dissatisfaction with his life and what he might do about it. — Claire Tomalin
In 2007, several musicologists contacted me at about the same time, expressing interest in the work of the mysterious Muriel Herbert, a few of whose songs they had come across. — Claire Tomalin
As a young man, Dickens worked as a reporter in the House of Commons and hated it. He felt that all politicians spoke with the same voice. — Claire Tomalin
You become more tolerant when you become older. You're not interested in rapping people over the knuckles; you're interested in understanding them. — Claire Tomalin
My life was a sort of series of random disasters. — Claire Tomalin
Poor Nelly, she was not to know that fashions in sin change as much as other fashions. — Claire Tomalin
When I wrote about Mary Wollstonecraft, I found that here she was, in the late 18th century, going to work for the 'Analytical Review.' What was the 'Analytical Review?' It was a magazine that dealt with politics and literature. — Claire Tomalin
I think people are always saying things are 'over.' Fiction has been regularly 'over' since the 19th century. — Claire Tomalin
'Philomena' was even better than I had expected. I was so pleased to see the evil Irish nuns thoroughly exposed, and I thought Judi Dench gave a flawless performance, as did everybody else. — Claire Tomalin
Today's children have very short attention spans because they are being reared on dreadful television programmes which are flickering away in the corner. — Claire Tomalin
Being himself was more exhausting than impersonating a stage character. — Claire Tomalin
I'm usually convinced that what I'm working on is a total disaster. — Claire Tomalin
In 1843, everybody was hungry, unemployed, and conditions were very bad. — Claire Tomalin
If I'm in a state about a book, I'll get up at 6 A.M. and write before breakfast, but usually I'll start afterwards and then work a full day with a break for lunch. — Claire Tomalin
Why do we read biography? Why do we choose to write it? Because we are human beings, programmed to be curious about other human beings, and to experience something of their lives. This has always been so - look at the Bible, crammed with biographies, very popular reading. — Claire Tomalin
I continually get more information about a subject after the book has been published. — Claire Tomalin
Simon Russell Beale is an incomparable speaker of Shakespeare and a superb all-round actor. — Claire Tomalin
When dealing with a subject who is dead, you have this feeling of being God. You know who they're going to marry, when they're going to die. It's strange to feel so omniscient. — Claire Tomalin
I was very priggish as a child. I saved up for a book on medieval English nunneries, for which I was despised by my friends. — Claire Tomalin
I was working at the 'Evening Standard' when I heard that there was a job going as deputy literary editor on the 'New Statesman.' I remember thinking, 'That's perfect.' It was three days a week, and I had children, but I could make that work - so I applied for it and got it. — Claire Tomalin
I have been fascinated by Dickens worshippers who strenuously deny that he did anything wrong in relation to his wife, even though the record is clear that he did. — Claire Tomalin
Dickens was a part of how the whole celebration of Christmas as we know it today emerged during the 19th century. — Claire Tomalin
Essentially, I spent most of my childhood with my mother and my older sister, and I suppose I had rather a romantic vision of how things might be if there were men around; I saw myself in a country house with six children and a garden. That has never been achieved - and I still regret it. — Claire Tomalin
By the time I went up to Cambridge, I was extremely quiet and well behaved, although I now meet people who remember me as not like that at all. — Claire Tomalin
'A Christmas Carol' has been described as the most perfect of Dickens's works and as a quintessential heart-warming story, and it is certainly the most popular. — Claire Tomalin
Historians will handle a much wider range of sources than a biographer and will be covering a broader spectrum of events, time, peoples. — Claire Tomalin
All writers behave badly. All people behave badly. — Claire Tomalin
I think it's quite normal for people to have love affairs. — Claire Tomalin
One of my most vivid memories of the mid-1950s is of crying into a washbasin full of soapy grey baby clothes - there were no washing machines - while my handsome and adored husband was off playing football in the park on Sunday morning with all the delightful young men who had been friends to both of us at Cambridge three years earlier. — Claire Tomalin
I always feel sad when I come to the end of a book. — Claire Tomalin
As he approached his 28th birthday in February 1840, Dickens knew himself to be famous, successful and tired. He needed a rest, and he made up his mind to keep the year free of the pressure of producing monthly installments of yet another long novel. — Claire Tomalin
When you live with Dickens for years, reading him and trying to present him as faithfully as you can, you can't fail to love the man - so the shock of his bad behaviour is considerable, even when you know it is coming. — Claire Tomalin
Everybody is vulnerable through love of their children. Hostages to fortune. — Claire Tomalin
Writing Charles Dickens' biography is like writing five biographies. — Claire Tomalin
People who attack biography choose as their models vulgar and offensive biography. You could equally attack novels or poems by choosing bad poems or novels. — Claire Tomalin
I thought it was a glorious thing to be a critic and to be a literary editor, and one was really doing something that mattered: to keep up standards, to take books seriously. — Claire Tomalin
The whole world knows Dickens, his London and his characters. — Claire Tomalin
After Shakespeare, Dickens is the great creator of characters, multiple characters. — Claire Tomalin
I would perhaps like to go back to writing small books about obscure people. — Claire Tomalin
I know it sounds pathetic, but I don't know who I am. — Claire Tomalin
I fell in love with Shakespeare when I was 12, and I read the whole works. Yes, I was precocious. — Claire Tomalin
Dickens belongs to the English people. — Claire Tomalin
Dickens never joined a political party nor put forward a political programme. He was a writer who rightly saw his power as coming through his fiction. — Claire Tomalin
Everyone finds their own version of Charles Dickens. The child-victim, the irrepressibly ambitious young man, the reporter, the demonic worker, the tireless walker. The radical, the protector of orphans, helper of the needy, man of good works, the republican. The hater and the lover of America. The giver of parties, the magician, the traveler. — Claire Tomalin
I enjoyed the whole process of learning and was always happy when autumn came and school or college started up again. — Claire Tomalin
I always try to travel light. — Claire Tomalin
Biographies are, in their nature, far more difficult to make into films than novels, because novels come with plots constructed and dialogue written, whereas I don't invent dialogue for my subjects or plot their lives for them. — Claire Tomalin
The thing I love about Rome is that is has so many layers. In it, you can follow anything that interests you: town planning, architecture, churches or culture. It's a city rich in antiquity and early Christian treasures, and just endlessly fascinating. There's nowhere else like it. — Claire Tomalin
Dickens was very practical and sensible. — Claire Tomalin
Biographers use historians more than historians use biographers, although there can be two-way traffic - e.g., the ever-growing production of biographies of women is helping to change the general picture of the past presented by historians. — Claire Tomalin
I had forgotten until I looked up old notes that I sold the film rights of my first book, a life of Mary Wollstonecraft: there was a lunch, a contract, a small sum of money, then nothing. — Claire Tomalin
I belong to the Richmond Concert Society, who put on very good concerts. — Claire Tomalin
All the people I have written about remain with me - perhaps they are my closest friends. — Claire Tomalin
I would like to have a more social life than I have. — Claire Tomalin
The young Dickens was so alive, so self-confident, so funny. — Claire Tomalin
I'm interested in history, in trying to relate the past to the present and to understand how people thought about their problems and pleasures. — Claire Tomalin
Most writers can tell stories of how their books failed to be made into films. — Claire Tomalin
I sometimes think that, since I started writing biographies, I've had more of a life in books than I have had in my real life. — Claire Tomalin
Writers don't make good spouses. When I am writing, I'm not a good wife. I shut myself away, and all my emotions are directed towards what I'm trying to write. — Claire Tomalin
Biographers search for traces, for evidence of activity, for signs of movement, for letters, for diaries, for photographs. — Claire Tomalin