7 Quotes & Sayings By Al Kennedy

A.L. Kennedy was born in London in 1963, but her family moved to Australia when she was five. Her first collection of short stories, The End of the World Club, appeared in 1994; the following year her first novel, The Beauty Queen of Leenane, won the Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best First Book and the Miles Franklin Award. A second novel, Fish Cheeks, was published in 1998 Read more

She is the editor of ten anthologies of short fiction and three collections of essays. A.L. Kennedy's novels have been translated into more than fifteen languages.

1
Have more humility. Remember you don't know the limits of your own abilities. Successful or not, if you keep pushing beyond yourself, you will enrich your own life — and maybe even please a few strangers. A.L. Kennedy
2
A good roast of sun, it slows you, lets you relax—and out here if there's anything wrong, you can see it coming with bags of time to do what's next. This is the place and the weather for peace, for the cultivation of a friendly mind. A.L. Kennedy
3
Read. As much as you can. As deeply and widely and nourishingly and ­irritatingly as you can. And the good things will make you remember them, so you won't need to take notes. A.L. Kennedy
4
Reality–there’s nothing but horror in that. A.L. Kennedy
5
As every languageless, stateless, selfless nation has one last, twisted image of its worst and best, we have the ceilidh. Here we pretend we are Highland, pretend we have mysteries in our work, pretend we have work. We forget our record of atrocities wherever we have been made masters and become comfortable servants again. Our present and our past creep in to change each other and we feel angry and sad and Scottish. Perhaps we feel free. A.L. Kennedy
6
Being me is a job – is labour so time-consuming and expensive that I have to have a second job just to support it. So that I can drink, I have to get drink and that isn’t something people give away and then there’s drink that I need because I have drunk and the other drink I have to keep around because, sooner or later, I will drink it. That’s a full-time occupation: that’s like being a miner, or a nurse. A.L. Kennedy