22 Quotes by Jonathan Coe
- The writer I feel the most affinity with - you said you felt my books are 19th century novels, I think they're 18th century novels - is Fielding, Henry Fielding, he's the guy who does it for me.
- It seems to me that you would have to write a novel on a very small, intimate scale for it not to become political.
- You would go mad if you began to speculate about the impact your novel might have while you were still writing it.
- Luckily, in my case, I have managed, by writing, to do the one thing that I always wanted to do.
- But we are entitled to look for continuity in politics.
- My only regret is that I signed away the world rights and in America they've been far and away my most successful books, but I never saw a cent from any of it.
- Thatcherism has become bigger than she ever was.
- The more melancholy side of my literary personality is much in tune with BS Johnson's.
- They were written in the early '90s when I was strapped for cash.
- Writers never feel comfortable having labels attached to them, however accurate they are.
- I'm one of those unlucky people who had a happy childhood.
- The biggest markets for my books outside the UK are France and Italy, and those are the two countries where I also have the closest personal relationships with my translators - I don't know whether that's a coincidence, or if there's something to be learned from it.
- I have two ideas for novels at the moment, neither of them all that conventional, but I'm not ready to choose between them yet, let alone settle down to the process of writing.
- I became quite taken over by Johnson's personality at some points while writing the biography, and since I went straight on to The Closed Circle afterwards, I did sometimes feel I could hear him whispering in my ear while I was working on it.
- But you can try to read books at the wrong time or for the wrong reasons.
- But I have always - ever since The Accidental Woman - written novels about individuals attempting to make choices in the context of situations over which they have no control.
- But at the same time, I have trouble keeping things out of books, which is why I don't write short stories because they turn into novels.
- As the books grew bigger and more ambitious, the situations in question sometimes became political ones, and so it became necessary to start painting in the social background on a scale which eventually became panoramic.
- As soon as you start writing about how human beings interact with each other socially, you're into politics, aren't you?
- Ah, well, I have no talent for nonfiction, that's my problem.
- Contemporary Britain seems an endlessly fascinating place to me - but if I knew a little bit more about other places, and other times, maybe it wouldn't.
- I think it's also the case that I'm not as widely travelled, or as well-educated in history, as most of the other novelists I meet: so I have to write about my own country, at the present time, because it's more or less all I know about!
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