I find it just simply takes me right back to those times, and I really can’t take it, I don’t want to, I mean, why should I face up to it? What good does it do me? I know it happened, and that’s it.

Meaning of the quote

The quote suggests that the writer finds it difficult to confront and think about certain past events. The writer does not want to face these memories because they are painful and do not seem to serve any purpose. The writer acknowledges that the events happened, but feels it is better to move on rather than dwell on them.

About Diana Wynne Jones

Diana Wynne Jones was an acclaimed English author who wrote captivating fantasy and speculative fiction novels for children and young adults. Her work often explored themes of time travel and parallel universes, and she was a major inspiration for many other renowned fantasy and science fiction writers.

More about the author

More quotes from Diana Wynne Jones

Mainly as sort of blueprints for dealing with most of the adults in their lives, to some extent with their fellows. It is this notion of aiming high and there’s always hope, aim low and you might as well stop now.

Diana Wynne Jones

English children's fantasy writer

If you take myth and folklore, and these things that speak in symbols, they can be interpreted in so many ways that although the actual image is clear enough, the interpretation is infinitely blurred, a sort of enormous rainbow of every possible colour you could imagine.

Diana Wynne Jones

English children's fantasy writer

Fantasy for me as a kid was real, and I had a fantasy about what life was, whether it was sort of wicked and dire, or wholly normal, or whatever. Anything really close to home is not, it seems to me, what a good book should be about.

Diana Wynne Jones

English children's fantasy writer

It’s a lucky child that knows that they’re a genius, unaimed and all that.

Diana Wynne Jones

English children's fantasy writer

I find it just simply takes me right back to those times, and I really can’t take it, I don’t want to, I mean, why should I face up to it? What good does it do me? I know it happened, and that’s it.

Diana Wynne Jones

English children's fantasy writer

It seems to me that humour is everybody’s way of keeping sane and standing off from the situations so that they can see it intellectually, as well as emotionally, and I don’t know whether you’ve noticed, but if somebody tells a joke, it’s nearly always a mini fantasy.

Diana Wynne Jones

English children's fantasy writer

Actually, in the wild, we’d be the only person that we wouldn’t recognize, if you think about it.

Diana Wynne Jones

English children's fantasy writer

This is ridiculous, I mean, wholly ridiculous. It never did any child any harm to have something that was a tiny bit above them anyway, and I claim that anyone who can follow Doctor Who can follow absolutely anything.

Diana Wynne Jones

English children's fantasy writer

I think one of things is that all fantasy it seems to me works the way your brain basically works. This is perhaps a startling concept, but I think it’s true.

Diana Wynne Jones

English children's fantasy writer

This does make me very very careful, particularly in the second draft, to get it right, because you do feel that somebody in the future who may be extremely important for everybody, is going to have me behind them, and this is a responsibility, a huge one.

Diana Wynne Jones

English children's fantasy writer

And indeed if you think you’re a genius at something, what you achieve is very much according to your expectations; if you think you’re no good, you’re not going to get anywhere.

Diana Wynne Jones

English children's fantasy writer

I do feel very strongly that this is one of the things which people need encouragement to sort out, because I have this very strong feeling that everybody is probably a genius at something, it’s just a question of finding this.

Diana Wynne Jones

English children's fantasy writer

I mean one of the things about being alone is that you’ve no people to define yourself off, I mean, people are like all-round mirrors, because let’s face it, we don’t often see ourselves all round in a mirror anyway, do we.

Diana Wynne Jones

English children's fantasy writer