8 Quotes & Sayings By Edmund De Waal

Edmund de Waal is the author of, among others, We Are Our Brains, The Hare with Amber Eyes, The Hare with the Amber Eyes, and The Hare with Amber Eyes. His books have been translated into twenty-six languages. He is also the author of several children's books on animal behavior, including The Tiger Who Came to Tea, which has been translated into twenty-eight languages. His experiences at the World Health Organization's training school in Guinea led him on an exploration of the effects of colonialism on villagers in West Africa Read more

He published his findings in his award-winning book To Kill a Mockingbird: A Tale of Two Fathers.

1
All art is the result of one’s having been in danger of having gone through an experience all the way to the end when no one can go any further. This is what it is like to be an artist — you are unsteady on the edge of life like a swan before an anxious launching of himself on the floods where he is gently caught. Edmund De Waal
2
There are things in this world that the children hear, but whose sounds oscillate below an adult's sense of pitch. Edmund De Waal
3
There is no straight road to finding yourself, to making something. Edmund De Waal
4
With languages, you can move from one social situation to another. With languages, you are at home anywhere. Edmund De Waal
5
Even when one is no longer attached to things, it's still something to have been attached to them; because it was always for reasons which other people didn't grasp...' There are the places in memory you do not wish to go with others. Edmund De Waal
6
Stories are a kind of thing, too. Stories and objects share something, a patina. I thought I had this clear, two years ago before I started, but I am no longer sure how this works. Perhaps a patina is a process of rubbing back so that the essential is revealed, the way that a striated stone tumbled in a river feels irreducible, the way that this netsuke of a fox has become little more than a memory of a nose and a tail. But it also seems additive, in the way that a piece of oak furniture gains over years and years of polishing, and the way the leaves of my medlar shine. Edmund De Waal
7
The problem is that I am in the wrong century to burn things. I am the wrong generation to let it go. Edmund De Waal