9 Quotes & Sayings By Jonathan Gash

Jonathan Gash was born in Oxford, England. His first novel, The Crooked Mile was published by Arrow Books in May 2013. He subsequently won the Crime Writer's Association's Gold Dagger Award for his sixth novel, The Cut-Out Girl. He received the Adam Craig Award for Best New Crime Writer of the Year in 2015, and the Somerset Maugham Award for Best Crime Novel of the year for his seventh book, The Rook Read more

Jonathan is also a contributor to BBC Radio 4's "Desert Island Discs" and has written columns for "The Daily Telegraph", "The Daily Mail", "The Daily Express", and "The Daily Star". He is married with two sons and lives in London.

1
Woods are grim places. Farmers shoot squirrels, crows, magpies, and hang them up on trees to warn Mother Nature to get it together or else. Much notice she takes, being in league with God. They're a right pair, more carnage than the rest of us put together. Jonathan Gash
2
Forgery, being the weirdest form of creativity there is, like antiques, costs lives. Why is it that antiques demand sacrificial victims? Dunno, but if they don't get enough, forgery does. You want proof? Here it is: Once a faker's found out, he dies. Truly. It always happens. Jonathan Gash
3
I began to enjoy myself: being apoplectic's quite invigorating. Jonathan Gash
4
The problem: If you've an antique for sale, then, sad to relate, the world isn't your oyster. It's not that easy. Even if somebody gives you the National Gallery, your options are still very, very limited. Okay, you can sell the Old Masters, set up a trust, buy your favorite brewery. But that's strictly it. You're limited by honesty on one hand and law - that hobble of sanity - on the other. Jonathan Gash
5
Even gods decay. Like, in 1890 somebody sold off thousands of mummified Ancient Egyptian sacred cats - _for fertilizer_. Get the point? Constancy isn't. Jonathan Gash
6
Fraud is the daughter of greed. Jonathan Gash
7
The risks in antiques fraud are relative. Other criminals risk the absolute. You've never heard of a fraudster involved in a shoot-out, of the "Come and get me, copper! " sort. Or of some con artist needing helicopter gunships to bring him. No, we subtle-mongers do it with the smile, the promise, the hint. And we have one great ally: greed. And make no mistake. Greed is everywhere, like weather. Jonathan Gash
8
Every inch of space was used. As the road narrowed, signs receded upwards and changed to the vertical. Businesses simply soared from ground level and hung out vaster, more fascinatingly illuminated shingles than competitors. We were still in a traffic tangle, but now the road curved. Shops crowded the pavements and became homelier. Vegetables, spices, grocery produce in boxes or hanging from shop lintels, meats adangle - as always, my ultimate ghastliness - and here and there among the crowds the alarming spectacle of an armed Sikh, shotgun aslant, casually sitting at a bank entrance. And markets everywhere. To the right, cramped streets sloped down to the harbor. To the left, as we meandered along the tramlines through sudden dense markets of hawkers' barrows, the streets turned abruptly into flights of steps careering upwards into a bluish mist of domestic smoke, clouds of washing on poles, and climbing. Hong Kong had the knack of building where others wouldn't dare. . Jonathan Gash