55 Quotes & Sayings By Sebastian Faulks

Sebastian Faulks was born in London and has lived there since 1979. He was educated at St Paul's School and Cambridge University and worked as a journalist. His first novel, A Week in December, won the Whitbread First Novel Award. The best-selling Birdsong, The Girl at the Lion d'Or, and On Green Wings were all published to international acclaim; Birdsong was adapted into a film starring Ralph Fiennes and Kristin Scott Thomas Read more

His 2006 novel, Charlotte Gray, was shortlisted for the 2007 Booker Prize; his latest novel, Bring Up the Bodies, is set in Elizabethan London.

1
I want to be careful not to throw all this away. This is happiness. I think this is what happiness is. I haven't got it yet, but I can sense it out there. I feel I'm close to it. Some days, I'm so close I can almost smell it. Sebastian Faulks
That sense of happiness just out beyond my reach -...
2
That sense of happiness just out beyond my reach - I'm not sure I'd grasped that exactly, but I'd got something close to it, contentment maybe, or at least a functioning routine with regular rewards. Sebastian Faulks
The thought of all that happiness was hard to bear....
3
The thought of all that happiness was hard to bear. What's the point of happiness when all it does is throw the facts of dying into clear relief? Sebastian Faulks
4
I looked at him on the bed. He coughed once and a trail of brownish dead blood came out of his mouth and ran down the side of his chin. Then he stopped breathing. And I thought, I'll make sure I never end up here, either. Sebastian Faulks
5
There was a pretty young woman I used to see pegging out sheets and I worried that she would grow old there and that no one would know how beautiful she was. And maybe she would die without ever having really lived. Sebastian Faulks
6
I suppose it was a dream that lasted really about fifty years. By the time universal education had begun to work properly, say 1925, and the time the first teachers started to hold back information, say 1975. So a fifty-year dream."" I think what's happened is that because they themselves know less than their predecessors, innovators and leaders today have remade the world in their own image. Spellchecks. Search engines. They've remodeled the world so that ignorance is not really a disadvantage. And I should think that increasingly they'll carry on reshaping the world to accommodate a net loss of knowledge. . Sebastian Faulks
7
I suppose I was lucky enough to be educated at a time when teachers still thought children could handle knowledge. They trusted us. Then there came a time when they decided that because not every kid in the class could understand or remember those things they wouldn't teach them anymore because it wasn't fair on the less good ones. So they withheld knowledge. Then I suppose the next lot of teachers didn't have the knowledge to withhold. Sebastian Faulks
8
And sometimes in life, I imagine, good things do happen. Most of the time, it's the opposite, obviously. But I don't think you should rule out the possibility that just occasionally chance might deal you a good card. Sebastian Faulks
You put your time where your priority is.
9
You put your time where your priority is. Sebastian Faulks
We're not really conscious of what we're doing most of...
10
We're not really conscious of what we're doing most of the time. Sebastian Faulks
Until we can navigate in time, I'm not sure that...
11
Until we can navigate in time, I'm not sure that we can prove that what happened is real. Sebastian Faulks
.. . she read with undifferentiated glee .. .
12
.. . she read with undifferentiated glee .. . Sebastian Faulks
I breathed and breathed and did feel some calmness enter...
13
I breathed and breathed and did feel some calmness enter in, though it was, as always, shot with a sense of loss. Loss and fear. Sebastian Faulks
I know. I was there. I saw the great void...
14
I know. I was there. I saw the great void in your soul, and you saw mine. Sebastian Faulks
It's only after the change is fully formed that you...
15
It's only after the change is fully formed that you can see what's happened. Sebastian Faulks
He didn’t ask himself if she was beautiful, because the...
16
He didn’t ask himself if she was beautiful, because the physical effect of her presence made the question insignificant. Sebastian Faulks
17
And in that history you're trying to connect to something that once was yours - to something purer, better, something that you lost or something, maybe, that you never knew but that you feel you knew. Sebastian Faulks
18
It was entirely silent and I tried to breathe its peace. Sebastian Faulks
19
The thing about opium is that it makes pain or difficulty unimaginable. Sebastian Faulks
20
The physical shock took away the pain of being. Sebastian Faulks
21
A bit of the vagueness of music stops you going completely mad, I imagine. Sebastian Faulks
22
All reality about me now appeared to be in tatters, taken down and reduced to the civil war of its particles. I held on very, very tight indeed. Sebastian Faulks
23
My own diagnosis of my problem is a simpler one. It’s that I share 50 per cent of my genome with a banana and 98 per cent with a chimpanzee. Banana’s don’t do psychological consistency. And the tiny part of us that’s different - the special Homo sapiens bit - is faulty. It doesn’t work. Sorry about that. Sebastian Faulks
24
How grand, to be a Doctor of whatever and to weigh up and decide people's future. Sebastian Faulks
25
All my life I had lived on the presumption that there was no existence beyond.. flesh, the moment of being alive.. then nothing. I had searched in superstition.. But there was nothing. Then I heard the sound of my own life leaving me. It was so.. tender. I regretted that I had paid it no attention. Then I believed in the wisdom of what other men had found before me.. I saw that those simple things might be true.. I never wanted to believe in them because it was better to fight my own battle. You can believe in something without compromising the burden of your own existence. . Sebastian Faulks
26
Depression - that limp word for the storm of black panic and half-demented malfunction - had over the years worked itself out in Charlotte's life in a curious pattern. Its onset was often imperceptible: like an assiduous housekeeper locking up a rambling mansion, it noiselessly went about and turned off, one by one, the mind's thousand small accesses to pleasure. Sebastian Faulks
27
Grief is a peculiar emotion. Sebastian Faulks
28
[“What is the most real thing you can think of?”] Jacques thought for a long time before answering; he tried to weigh up what was most vital and enduring in all that he had known. Eventually, no longer smiling, he said, ‘Memory’. Sebastian Faulks
29
Levade had told her one day that there was no such thing as a coherent personality. When you are forty you have no cell in your body that you had at eighteen. It was the same, he said, with your character. Memory is the only thing that binds you to earlier selves; for the rest, you become an entirely different being every decade or so, sloughing off the old persona, renewing and moving on. You are not who you were, he told her, nor who you will be. Sebastian Faulks
30
Currents of desire and excitement that she had not known or thought about for years now flooded in her. She wanted him to bring alive what she had buried, and to demean, destroy, her fabricated self. Sebastian Faulks
31
Heisenberg and Bohr and Einstein strike me as being like gifted retriever dogs. Off they go, not just for an afternoon, but for ten years; they come back exhausted and triumphant and drop at your feet... a vole. It's a remarkable thing in its way, a vole–intricate, beautiful really, marvellous. But does it... Does it help? Does it move the matt Sebastian Faulks
32
The past was suddenly rushing in on me in a way I found hard to fight. Sebastian Faulks
33
I never for a moment considered killing myself, because it wouldn't have achieved anything. Sebastian Faulks
34
With no blame there's no shame. A human society can't exist without shame. Shame is like handedness or walking upright. It's a central human attribute. In fact, it's the first human quality ever recorded.'' Where?'' Genesis, Chapter Three. The covering of nakedness. The acquisition of shame was the first consequence of consciousness, of the speciating moment. Take shame from me and you are calling me pre-human. Sebastian Faulks
35
She was so beautiful I had to move away. Sebastian Faulks
36
Until she had had children of her own she had not been able to contemplate the death of either of her parents; when the subject had arisen, in conversation or in her own imagining, she had said only: I just don't know what I'd do. Sebastian Faulks
37
We all operate on different levels of awareness. Half the time I don't know what I'm doing. Sebastian Faulks
38
I'd never chosen to be alone, but that was the way things had turned out, and I'd grown used to it. Sebastian Faulks
39
Have you ever been lonely? No, neither have I. Solitary, yes. Alone, certainly. But lonely means minding about being on your own. I've never minded about it. Sebastian Faulks
40
One thing about London is that when you step out into the night, it swallows you. Sebastian Faulks
41
He tried to sleep, but his head was filled with the faces of lunatics, their palsied hands, their shattered eyes. Sebastian Faulks
42
People wonder why you choose certain subjects to write about. The truth is: you don't really. They choose you Sebastian Faulks
43
There is an arch supported by four vast columns. Etched over hundreds and hundreds of yards of stone, furlongs of stone, there are names: "Who are these, these? The men who died in this battle?"" No. The lost, the ones they did not find. The others are in the cemeteries."" These are just the .. the unfound." When she could speak again. From the whole war?" The man shook his head. "Just these fields." Elizabeth sat on the steps. "No one told me. My God no one told me, . Sebastian Faulks
44
Why take drugs specifically designed to send you insane? Sebastian Faulks
45
Gradually the feeling wears off, and I feel swamped again by the inexplicable pettiness of being alive. Sebastian Faulks
46
The best thing is the combined effect of nicotine with alcohol, greater than the sum of the two parts. Sebastian Faulks
47
The end-of-summer winds make people restless. Sebastian Faulks
48
Oh, the sweetness of giving in, of full surrender. Sebastian Faulks
49
There aren't many great passages written about food, but I love one by George Millar, who worked for the SOE in the second world war and wrote a book called 'Horned Pigeon.' He had been on the run and hadn't eaten for a week, and his description of the cheese fondue he smells in the peasant kitchen of a house in eastern France is unbelievable. Sebastian Faulks
50
I think closeness to death would be pretty exhilarating in a way, and friendship, yeh, and selflessness, a kind of selflessness, a sense of your own worthlessness, I think, is pretty exhilarating. Sebastian Faulks
51
In the 1970s, British food was beginning to get good, whereas in France it was just starting its long, sad decline. My most memorable meals, however, have been in Italy. Sebastian Faulks
52
A romantic is someone who believes that something is valuable even if it doesn't last. And a non-romantic is someone who says that if something doesn't endure, or can't be logically proved and pinned down, it's worthless. Sebastian Faulks
53
I am a romantic, in a literary way, by which I mean the Romantic poets, who thought just because a sensation is fleeting doesn't mean it isn't valuable. If the only criterion of value is whether something lasts, then the whole of human life is a waste of time. Sebastian Faulks
54
My ideal relationship with the reader is that at certain points they will have said, 'I'm finding this quite tough, but I'm going to hang in there, ' then at the end they will say, 'Oh God, I'm glad I hung on, it was so worth it.' Sebastian Faulks