Search quotes by author:    A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 


Helen Dunmore Quotes


A novel, in the end, is a container, a shape which you are trying to pour your story into.

As individuals, we are shaped by story from the time of birth; we are formed by what we are told by our parents, our teachers, our intimates.

Children will not pretend to be enjoying books, and they will not read books because they have been told that these books are good. They are looking for delight.

Fiction came quite a while later. I began with short stories and fiction for children.

However, I began to submit poems to British magazines, and some were accepted. It was a great moment to see my first poems published. It felt like entering a tradition.

However, the difficulties and pleasures of the writing itself are similar for a novel with a historical setting and a novel with a contemporary setting, as far as I'm concerned.

I can remember being in my pram: children stayed in their prams much longer then than they do now. A big bouncy pram with black covers and a hood with metal clips that could trap your fingers. I was looking up at my sister who was sitting on the pram seat, with her back to me.

I concentrate on the lives of individuals whom the reader comes to know and feel with intimately.

I could start with Mandelstam, who was a huge influence on my early writing.

I didn't choose Russia but Russia chose me. I had been fascinated from an early age by the culture, the language, the literature and the history to the place.

I enjoy research; in fact research is so engaging that it would be easy to go on for years, and never write the novel at all.

I have learned so much from working with other poets, travelling and reading with them, spending days discussing poems in progress. There is the sense that we are all, as writers, part of something which is more powerful than any of us.

I hope that readers will tear through my books because they can't stop themselves - and then, maybe, read them again and find new things there.

I was always influenced by language.

I would like people to come into my Dreamworld and then choose to stay.

If we understand the past, we are more likely to recognise what is happening around us.

It is a violation which has obsessed the tyrants of the twentieth century. They do not want simply to kill their opponents, but to liquidate them, to deny that they have ever existed.

Mourning Ruby is not a flat landscape: it is more like a box with pictures painted on every face. And each face is also a door which opens, I hope, to take the reader deep into the book.

My first collection of poems was published by Bloodaxe Books, which was then a very new imprint.

Poets go through a very tough apprenticeship in the use of words.