Home
Authors
Tags
App
Get QuoteDark Inspirational Quotes App
" For me, there has always been the irresistible lure of a secret. "
Fiona Barton
Always
Been
Irresistible
Related Quotes:
" The unsaid is a powerful tool. It invites the reader into the narrative, filling in gaps, interpreting silences and half-finished sentences, and seeing the hidden fear in someone's eye. "
Fiona Barton
Fear
Hidden
Powerful
" Since reading 'Sophie's Choice,' I have been haunted by the agonizing idea of choosing between two children. "
Fiona Barton
Reading
Haunted
Children
" I chose to write from different perspectives despite its complexity because it is what I have always done as a journalist. "
Fiona Barton
Different
Done
Always
" It's amazing to me that journalists are held in such low esteem. "
Fiona Barton
Esteem
Held
Low
" The emotions, responsibilities - and the pain - of motherhood are unique to each of us with children. Ask any woman, and she will have her own story to tell. "
Fiona Barton
Story
Pain
Children
" The imagination is such as powerful tool: suggestion is all you need. People fill in gaps. "
Fiona Barton
Powerful
People
You
" Mental health is something that I'm very interested in. "
Fiona Barton
Mental Health
Health
Something
" When you are a journalist, you are always looking for the next story. It might come from a phone call from a contact or an unanswered question you spot in someone else's article. "
Fiona Barton
Phone
Phone Call
Looking
" Writing is not just about putting words on a page. Ideas have to cook first. "
Fiona Barton
First
Writing
Words
" I know I love a novel with an unreliable narrator, and I think many readers do as well. "
Fiona Barton
Many
I Think
Think
" The success of 'The Widow' meant there were expectations for the second book from the first word, and it has created a completely different writing experience. Not to say I haven't enjoyed writing 'The Child,' but I confess there were times when I felt as if I was wrenching it out of my body with bloodied fingernails! "
Fiona Barton
Body
Book
Child
" I can't think whether I've actually interviewed the widow of a crime suspect. Obviously, I've interviewed members of the families of people who've been accused of things. "
Fiona Barton
Things
Crime
People
" It's a wonderful experience to be reading a story and think you've got things all figured out, and then suddenly, it all goes upside-down on you. "
Fiona Barton
Story
Think
Experience
" I like my villains clever, deep, and driven by pure evil. "
Fiona Barton
Like
Clever
Evil
" A lot of people think journalists are criminals, and there are some who haven't helped us. But the media is essential for democratic society. "
Fiona Barton
Some
Us
Media
" When I first became a journalist, people said, 'Oh, that must be interesting.' They saw it as slightly glamorous, slightly edgy. They wanted to know more. "
Fiona Barton
Know
Edgy
Interesting
" As a journalist, your words are regularly read by lots of people, but they're not your words: they're someone else's. You're quoting people. "
Fiona Barton
Words
You
People
" When you start writing fiction, you have to learn to invent, and it's very hard at the beginning to stop relying on facts and what you've heard. "
Fiona Barton
Start
Writing
You
" It was this fascination with hidden lives, I suspect, that led me to journalism; seeking to uncover the truth about people became a job. "
Fiona Barton
Job
Truth
Journalism
" It is a sad truth that apprenticeships fell out of favour in Britain in the Seventies and Eighties, when the manufacturing industries shed jobs and the construction industry went into decline. "
Fiona Barton
Sad
Manufacturing
Construction
" Garrison Keillor's 'Lake Wobegon' books create a world I can immerse myself in over and over. I love the deadpan humour, the warmth, and the wonderful characters in The Sidetrack Tap. I discovered them when I was about 30, starting with 'Leaving Home' and 'We Are Still Married,' and fell in love with the place and those flat Midwestern vowels. "
Fiona Barton
Home
Myself
Place
" As a reporter, I spent a great deal of time in court. During brief breaks in testimony, I would often look at the spouse, usually the wife, of the accused. I began to wonder how listening to the details of a crime purportedly committed by your spouse would affect that person's view of her husband. "
Fiona Barton
Great
Wife
Husband
" Once you write a book, you hand it over to the readers, and it's their book then. They're so involved. They ask questions about details that I haven't even thought about. "
Fiona Barton
Details
Questions
Thought
" When you think about it, psychological thrillers often involve extraordinary events happening to ordinary people. "
Fiona Barton
Think
Ordinary
Events