Writers tell stories better, because they’ve had more practice, but everyone has a book in them. Yes, that old cliche.
About Tanith Lee
Tanith Leewas a British science fiction and fantasy writer. She wrote more than 90 novels and 300 short stories, and was the winner of multiple World Fantasy Society Derleth Awards, the World Fantasy Lifetime Achievement Award and the Bram Stoker Award for Lifetime Achievement in Horror.
More quotes from Tanith Lee
At an early school, when I was about 5, they asked what we wanted to be when we grew up. Everyone said silly things, and I said I wanted to be an actress. So that was what I wanted to be, but what I was, of course, was a writer.
British writer (1947-2015)
The other writer who had a very important early influence on me when I was about 17 was C.S. Lewis.
British writer (1947-2015)
I love writers all across the board, but one who influenced me very directly at the beginning was Mary Renault.
British writer (1947-2015)
When I am fascinated by something, I like to play with it.
British writer (1947-2015)
I think of myself as a storyteller, and that is it.
British writer (1947-2015)
Writing is writing, and stories are stories. Perhaps the only true genres are fiction and non-fiction. And even there, who can be sure?
British writer (1947-2015)
I like writing about women, weak and strong, pathetic and heroic. I like writing about men, ditto. And all the variants of men and women, beasts and demons.
British writer (1947-2015)
I also love Disney, and will defend doing so, because there’s so much in those films and I don’t care if it’s stereotyped.
British writer (1947-2015)
I’ve been criticised for writing in too complex a manner for younger people.
British writer (1947-2015)
Pirates have always fascinated me.
British writer (1947-2015)
I like films, or some films, and would be intrigued to see my work on screen.
British writer (1947-2015)
If they had said my writing wasn’t good enough, fair enough, that’s an opinion. But to say it’s too complex is to insult the intelligence of the so-called young.
British writer (1947-2015)
I submitted manuscripts to publishers. This was not so much a feeling that I should be published as a wish to escape the feared and hated drudgery of normal work.
British writer (1947-2015)
I’m writing what comes into my head, or through me, or from somewhere else, and it is the most extraordinary, exciting thing. I love it, and I’m very greedy, and I really enjoy it!
British writer (1947-2015)
As a child, my mother told me lots of fairy stories, many her own invention. She, too, tended to reverse the norm.
British writer (1947-2015)
I just love writing. It’s magical, it’s somewhere else to go, it’s somewhere much more dreadful, somewhere much more exciting. Somewhere I feel I belong, possibly more than in the so-called real world.
British writer (1947-2015)
It’s very selfish when I write. I’m not aware, ever, of writing for another person; I’m not even really aware of writing for myself.
British writer (1947-2015)
Writers tell stories better, because they’ve had more practice, but everyone has a book in them. Yes, that old cliche.
British writer (1947-2015)
Genre categories are irrelevant. I dislike them, but I do not have the casting vote.
British writer (1947-2015)
People are always the start for me… animals, when I can get into their heads, gods, supernatural beings, immortals, the dead… these are all people to me.
British writer (1947-2015)
No one is ever ordinary.
British writer (1947-2015)
I never know where I am going, though. That is part of what makes it so wonderful. And after all, who does?
British writer (1947-2015)