“Burgess' chief themes...a Catholic sense of sin and a social sense of disaster, a fascination with the polymathic and polyglot artist and the strange and often gross and unbidden sources of art. Nor had Burgess taught languages or studied Joyce for nothing, though where Joyce sought the final consolation of form he sought those of prolixity; he was also a very effective literary critic, obsessed with language and punning....was happy to describe himself as a craftsman and not an aesthetician of writing; he is a Joycean without the formalism or indeed the restraint....inventive prolixity...gifts of linguistic and technical discovery; Burgess is a great postmodern storehouse of contemporary writing, opening the modern plurality of languages, discourses and codes for our use.”
“We can destroy what we have written, but we cannot unwrite it.”
Anthony Burgess
“When a man cannot choose, he ceases to be a man.”
Anthony Burgess
“Language exists less to record the actual than to liberate the imagination.”
Anthony Burgess
“People don't want to know. They have to be made to know. Whether they act on what they know is up to them. But they have to know.”
Anthony Burgess
“If Shakespeare required a word and had not met it in civilised discourse, he unhesitatingly made it up.”
Anthony Burgess