Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

25 quotes

"Politeness. Now there's a poor man's virtue if ever there was one. What's so admirable about inoffensiveness, I should like to know. After all, it's easily achieved. One needs no particular talent to be polite. On the contrary, being nice is what's left when you've failed at everything else. People with ambition don't give a damn what other people think about them."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"Our lives are so important to us that we tend to think the story of them begins with our birth. First there was nothing, then I was born...Yet that is not so. Human lives are not pieces of string that can be separated out from a knot of others and laid out straight. Families are webs. Impossible to touch one part of it without setting the rest vibrating. Impossible to understand one part without having a sense of the whole. - Vida Winter"

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"My study throngs with characters waiting to be written. Imaginary people, anxious for a life, who tug at my sleeve, crying, 'Me next! Go on! My turn!' I have to select. And once I have chosen, the others lie quiet for ten months or a year, until I come to the end of the story, and the clamor starts up again."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"All morning I struggled with the sensation of stray wisps of one world seeping through the cracks of another. Do you know the feeling when you start reading a new book before the membrane of the last one has had time to close behind you? You leave the previous book with ideas and themes -- characters even -- caught in the fibers of your clothes, and when you open the new book, they are still with you."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"Do you know the feeling when you start reading a new book before the membrane of the last one has had time to close behind you? You leave the previous book with ideas and themes–characters even–caught in the fibers of your clothes, and when you open the new book, they are still with you"

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"Our clients' faces, with the customary outward paleness and inner glow of the book lover."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"As one tends to the graves of the dead, so I tend the books. I clean them, do minor repairs, keep them in good order. And every day I open a volume or two, read a few lines or pages, allow the voices of the forgotten dead to resonate inside my head. Do they sense it, these dead writers, when their books are read? Does a pinprick of light appear in their darkness? Is their soul stirred by the feather touch of another mind reading theirs? I do hope so, for it must be very lonely being dead."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"For me to see is to read. It has always been that way."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"For at eight o’clock the world came to an end. It was reading time. The hours between eight in the evening and one or two in the morning have always been my magic hours."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"My genius is not so frail a thing that it cowers from the dirty fingers of newspapernen."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"Human lives are not pieces of string that can be separated out from a knot of others and laid out straight. Familes are webs. Impossible to touch one part of it without setting the rest vibrating. Impossible to understand one part without having a sense of the whole."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"Everybody has a story. It’s like families. You might not know who they are, might have lost them, but they exist all the same. You might drift apart or you might turn your back on them, but you can’t say you haven’t got them. Same goes for stories."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"I don't pretend reality is the same for everyone."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"Art, its completeness, its formedness, its finishedness, had no power to console. Words, on the other hand, were a lifeline."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"When fear and cold make a statue of you in your bed, don’t expect hard-boned and fleshless truth to come running to your aid. What you need are the plump comforts of a story. The soothing, rocking safety of a lie."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"We all have our sorrows, and although the exact delinaments, weight and dimensions of grief are different for everyone, the color of grief is common to us all. I know, he said, because he was human, and therefore, in a way, he did."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"She was a do-gooder, which means that all the ill she did, she did without realizing it."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"Politeness. Being nice is what's left when you've failed at everything else."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"People disappear when they die. Their voice, their laughter, the warmth of their breath. Their flesh. Eventually their bones. All living memory of them ceases. This is both dreadful and natural. Yet for some there is an exception to this annihilation. For in the books they write they continue to exist."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"In speech he stretched out his vowel sounds to give his mouth a rest before the next consonant."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"I am human. Like all humans, I do not remember my birth. By the time we wake up to ourselves, we are little children, and our advent is something that happened an eternity ago, at the beginning of time. We live like latecomers to the theater; we must catch up as best we can, divining the begging from the shape of later events. - Vida Winter"

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"But silence is not a natural environment for stories. They need words. Without them they grown pale, sicken and die. And then they haunt you."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"No one can hold you to a decision made in the middle of the night."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"...but he is a man, hence cannot see how tiresome it is to have explained at length what one has already fully understood."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

"A story so cherished it has to be dressed in casualness to disguise its significance in case the listener turned out to be unsympathetic."

Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale