8 Quotes & Sayings By Maggie Ofarrell

Maggie O'Farrell has lived in England and Spain and worked in the U.S. Her work has been translated into thirty-four languages, including Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Romanian, Hungarian, Czech, Hungarian, Spanish, French, German, Italian and Dutch. She has won the Costa Book Awards, the Whitbread Award for Best First Novel and was nominated for both the Orange Prize for Fiction and the Man Booker Prize. Her first book was shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award in 2007 Read more

She lives in London where she writes full-time.

1
We are all, Esme decides, just vessels through which identities pass: we are lent features, gestures, habits, then we hand them on. Nothing is our own. We begin in the world as anagrams of our antecedents. Maggie OFarrell
2
They have been together for so many years that they are no longer like two people but one strange four-legged creature. For her, so much of their marriage is about talk: she likes to talk, he likes to listen. Without him, she has no one to whom she can address her remarks, her observations, her running commentary about life in general. Maggie OFarrell
3
An English teacher at school once said to her, 'Alice, one thing I hope you never find out is that a broken heart hurts physically.' Nothing she has ever experienced has prepared her for the pain of this. Most of the time her heart feels as though it's waterlogged and her ribcage, her arms, her back, her temples, her legs all ache in a dull, persistent way: but at times like this the incredulity and the appalling irreversibility of what has happened cripple her with a pain so bad she often doesn't speak for days. Maggie OFarrell
4
All I was aware of was this hole, this gaping hole where my heart should have been. I read somewhere once that your heart is supposed to be the same size as your clenched fist, but this hole felt far bigger. It seemed to expand over my whole upper body and it felt cold, vacant - the cooling wind seemed to cut right through it. I felt frail and insubstantial, as if the wind could have blown me away. . Maggie OFarrell
5
She sits there and feels the loneliness and the lack of him Maggie OFarrell
6
If she was liquid, she would drink her; if she was a gas, she would breathe her; if she was a pill, she would down her'; if she was a dress, she would wear her; a plate, she would lick her clean. Maggie OFarrell
7
We begin in the world as anagrams of our antecedents. Maggie OFarrell