8 Quotes & Sayings By Mal Peet

Mal Peet was born in Sussex, England. At the age of 19 he moved to Canada and began his career as a journalist. His first book, The Day She Disappeared, was published in 1974, followed by The Day He Died in 1976 and The Day She Came Home in 1977. In 1978 Peet returned to England and worked for a London newspaper until 1992 when he accepted a position with the BBC in London Read more

He left the BBC in 1996 and moved to Canada where he wrote freelance articles for several newspapers and produced a weekly talk show on cable television. In 2001, Peet returned to England and resumed his career as a journalist writing articles for Canadian newspapers.

He used to say the uglier things are the longer...
1
He used to say the uglier things are the longer they live, and the ugliest things live forever. Mal Peet
2
I lived through all these times, these great events, without caring very much, concerned with my own aging rather than the world's. Most of us do likewise. History is the heavy traffic that prevents us from crossing the road. We're not especially interested in what it consists of. We wait, more or less patiently, for it to pause, so that we can get to the liquor store or the laundromat or the burger bar . Mal Peet
3
You do not win a war by dying for your country. You win a war by making sure that some poor bastard dies for his. Mal Peet
4
Imagination is highly suspect. Reality is what is beautiful. But we are blind to it because it is familiar. Mal Peet
5
He taught me that language was rubbery, plastic. It wasn't, as I thought, something you just use, but something you can play with. Words were made up of little bits that could be shuffled, turned back to front, remixed. They could be tucked and folded into other words to produce unexpected things. It was like cookery, like alchemy. Language hid more than it revealed. Mal Peet
6
Freedom had no place in the Soviet System. Freedom was another word for anarchy, and that wouldn't do at all. Mal Peet
7
Teen authors love to flirt with taboo, to grapple - sensitively - with dark and frightening issues, and there is nothing darker and more frightening than cancer. Mal Peet