The very concept of solid ground is a myth. The galaxy itself is adrift.

When you can stop you don't want to, and when you want to stop, you can't.

Comfort is beauty muted by heroin. Sadness is beauty drained by lack of it.

Drought brings out the worst in us and it's easy to hate your fellow human beings.

When you think you are in love, you don't want to know about the things that could end it.

And I come to realise that all my small todays, the way I act, will lead into my tomorrows.

Being the writer is merely control freak level two. You've got to get to control freak level one.

If there's one thing I've written that could survive into posterity, I'd want that to be the poetry.

If time stood still, and we could choose the time, the best time, then love without pain would be all I know.

The only films that really matter to me are the ones where there are characters whose interactions are moving.

Everything comes to nothing in the end, I suppose. Or at least, nothing happens exactly the way we imagine it.

Drawing on real life is what novelists do. It's not the same as reconstructing real life, which is what historians do.

That's why actors are so great and why they earn so much money. They take away the anxious necessity to find the right words.

Love could be fractured and serve different purposes, and that intense love could be divided, between people just as easily as between moments of time.

In the presence of their love I sensed my lonliness, and I understood for a moment, clearly, that deep and basic human desire for companionship at depth.

You're beautiful, but you're somewhere else. That's okay. I can handle that. But we won't continue as friends, not just now. I like you as a lover, not a friend.

I was a weird kid. It wasn't until I saw 'Aguirre: The Wrath of God' at 16 that my whole world changed. The obsession with that was equal to the obsession with writing.

The wonder to me is not that she made it through at all but that she made it through so relatively intact, so vibrant. So free of bitterness and so empty of resentment.

Imperceptibly, more time passes when I'm not remembering our every moment together, not recreating our every conversation, re-imagining our love-making. It is immeasurably sad.

Some people are attracted to sickness, to the kind of madness where sparks fly off the head, to the incoherence of despair, masked by nervous energy, which winds up looking like bewildered joy.

It's not that photography recaptures the world you have been in; more that it creates a new one: photographs are like Post-It Notes reminding us of the deep architectonic forms of space and thought.

Without Deborah Harry, there's no Madonna; there's no Lady Gaga and beyond. There was something that she did that was very new and powerful in pop, and she was responsible for a change in the way the world acted.

I will meet you on the nape of your neck one day, on the surface of intention, word becoming act. We will breathe into each other the high mountain tales, where the snows come from, where the waters begin.” -In the yellow time of pollen

What passes relentlessly through the years is blood, and time; all the bitterness or warmth along the way is almost incidental. Even blood gets forgotten eventually, bleached into myth which are bleached of all colour into ashes of myth.

The experience of watching great cinema - great art - is life enriching and spiritually uplifting no matter whether it's about as difficult as it gets, like 'Breaking the Waves,' or as light as it gets, like 'Jerry Maguire,' 'Election' or 'Toy Story.'

From time to time it has struck me that as a writer, I've somehow managed to live my life as I had long ago dreamt of doing, based on the Tintin paradigm: on my toes, travelling, senses attentuated, everything just adventure and exploration, curiosity and problem-solving.

I learnt too late that what is most important to us is always most precious at the moment it occurs, and it is precious in its absolute immediacy and not as some vague confirmation of future directions; since the only certain fact, aside from death, is the flimsiness of everything.

For the Tintin books were my emotional universe. To read them felt quite simply like being loved: in advance and by an entire world of pure possibility, my future. But to write to the author was to reach out for the lover. Even today, the power of reading one remains visceral: each book acts as a form of transportation, not just to the emotional landscape of this first literary love affair but to very specific memories.

Share This Page