“...Murder, I have often noticed, is a great matchmaker.”

“You're a man milliner, Poirot. I never notice what people have on."

“She'd never stopped for a moment wanting me to be different but her wishes were never going to come true.”

“It is fundamentals that matter --- not the trappings. (Alice Cunningham)”

“Of course, if you’ve made up your mind about it, you’ll find an answer to everything.”

“Of course, if you’ve made up your mind about it, you’ll find an answer to everything.”

“Young men are sadly degenerate nowadays.”

“Things are simple as a rule”

“You arouse my gastronomical juices, madame.”

“If suicide is your idea of escape from trouble then it doesn't very much matter what the trouble is.”

What she was finding also was how one book led to another, doors kept opening wherever she turned and the days weren't long enough for the reading she wanted to do.

A book is a device to ignite the imagination.

Books are not about passing time. They're about other lives. Other worlds. Far from wanting time to pass, one just wishes one had more of it. If one wanted to pass the time one could go to New Zealand.

You don't put your life into your books, you find it there.

We started off trying to set up a small anarchist community, but people wouldn't obey the rules.

How do I define history? It's just one fucking thing after another

The days weren't long enough for the reading she wanted to do.

Above literature?' said the Queen. 'Who is above literature? You might as well say one was above humanity.

Sometimes there is no next time, no time-outs, no second chances. Sometimes it’s now or never.

History is a commentary on the various and continuing incapabilities of men. What is history? History is women following behind with the bucket.

One of the hardest things for boys to learn is that a teacher is human. One of the hardest things for a teacher to learn is not to try and tell them.

Definition of a classic: a book everyone is assumed to have read and often thinks they have.

Clich s can be quite fun. That's how they got to be clich s.

I'm not "happy" but I'm not unhappy about it.

...she felt about reading what some writers felt about writing: that it was impossible not to do it and that at this late stage of her life she had been chosen to read as others were chosen to write.

History is just one fucking thing after another.

Cloisters, ancient libraries ... I was confusing learning with the smell of cold stone.

Reading is untidy, discursive and perpetually inviting.

It's subjunctive history. You know, the subjunctive? The mood used when something may or may not have happened. When it is imagined.

... Once I start a book I finish it. That was the way one was brought up. Books, bread and butter, mashed potato - one finishes what's on one's plate. That's always been my philosophy.

One reads for pleasure...it is not a public duty.

I don't always understand poetry!' 'You don't always understand it? Timms, I never understand it. But learn it now, know it now and you will understand it...whenever.

It was the kind of library he had only read about in books.

To read is to withdraw.To make oneself unavailable. One would feel easier about it if the pursuit inself were less...selfish.

All the effort went into getting there and then I had nothing left. I thought I'd got somewhere, then I found I had to go on.

Life is rather like a tin of sardines - we're all of us looking for the key.

God doesn't do notes, either. Did Jesus Christ say, "Can I be excused the Crucifixion?" No!

One recipe for happiness is to have to sense of entitlement.' To this she added a star and noted at the bottom of the page: 'This is not a lesson I have ever been in a position to learn.

The transmission of knowledge is in itself an erotic act.

I think of literature,' she wrote, 'as a vast country to the far borders of which I am journeying but will never reach. And I have started to late. I will never catch up.

I saw someone peeing in Jermym Street the other day. I thought, is this the end of civilization as we know it? Or is it simply someone peeing in Jermyn Street?

Can there be any greater pleasure than to come across an author one enjoys and then to find they have written not just one book or two, but at least a dozen?

History nowadays is not a matter of conviction. It’s a performance. It’s entertainment. And if it isn’t, make it so.

I have to seem like a human being all the time, but I seldom have to be one. I have people to do that for me.

. . . there was little to choose between Jews and Catholics. The Jews had holidays that turned up out of the blue and the Catholics had children in much the same way.

Books are not about passing the time. They're about other lives. Other worlds.

At eighty things do not occur; they recur.

Marriage is supposed to be a partnership. Good-looking people marry good-looking people and the others take what's left.

Dakin: The more you read, though, the more you'll see that literature is actually about losers. Scripps: No. Dakin: It's consolation. All literature is consolation.

Still, to be urged to write and to be urged to publish are two different things and nobody so far was urging her to do the latter.