Login | Register Share:
  Guess quote | Authors | Isles | Contacts

Laurell K. Hamilton [1963-0] American
Rank: 101
Writer


Laurell Kaye Hamilton is an American fantasy and romance writer. She is best known as the author of two series of stories.
Her New York Times-bestselling Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter series centers on Anita Blake, a professional zombie raiser, vampire executioner and supernatural consultant for the police, which includes novels, short story collections, and comic books. 

Good, Home



QuoteTagsRank
Everyone spends their lives trying to balance their world between good and evil. Good
101
I feel that if you are blessed, or lucky enough, to be doing well, you should help others.
102
What happens in Vegas may stay in Vegas, but what happens in New Orleans, goes home with you. Home
103
Like most creative people I don't fit well into boxes.
104
I love animals, always have, and it seemed natural to help the ASPCA. Animals have no voice of their own, so we have to be that voice.
105
You'd think a sociopath assassin wouldn't have a fan following but he does.
106
I've lost track of the number of people who want to be writers but never actually write anything. Talking about writing, dreaming about writing, can be very fun, but it won't get a book written. You've got to write.
107
You either mellow at 30, or your head explodes - take your choice.
108
I like conventions. I like meeting and greeting. I'm perched on that edge where I'm getting more attention than I quite know what to do with, though.
109
My writing style is very sensual, as in sensory detail.
110
Most of the monsters... are based on some sort of mythology. Every culture and even some geographical areas have monsters and mythology that is their own.
111
I want a kiss to be so believable it gives the reader shivers.
112
Two things I do well in books are sex and violence, but I don't want gratuitous sex or violence. The sex and violence are only as graphic as need be. And never included unless it furthers the plot or character development.
113
One of my rules is never explain. A writer is a lot like a magician, if you explain how the trick works then a lot of the magic turns mundane.
114
Perfection is an unattainable goal. It isn't going to be perfect. Just get words down on paper, and when you stumble to what you think is the end of the book, you will have hundreds of pages of words that came out of your head. It may not be perfect, but it looks like a book.
115
By 17, I was submitting to publications and collecting my first rejection slips.
116
It was just you had to be strong, and if you weren't strong you're a victim and you're not going to make it. That was the reality when I was growing up.
117
I always treated writing as a profession, never as a hobby. If you don't believe in yourself, no one else will.
118
Readers respond to every genre intensely, if it's a genre that appeals to them. Again, who can say why anyone enjoys horror and dark fantasy? If I can't answer the question for myself, I wouldn't dream of trying to answer it for others.
119
My characters surprise me constantly. My characters are like my friends - I can give them advice, but they don't have to take it. If your characters are real, then they surprise you, just like real people.
120
I think that my vampires in general were influenced by my being allowed to watch the Hammer vampire films. Vampire Circus, also shown as Circus of Fear, was one of those movies.
121
I cannot say how strongly I object to people using other people's writing as research. Research is non-fiction, especially for horror, fantasy, science fiction. Do not take your research from other people's fiction. Just don't.
122
I think like a detective.
123
If you're open to it, New Orleans will teach you about yourself, but if you want to hide from who you really are, the city will help you do that, too.
124
You give the reader a sense of a full meal.
125
I wasn't like most girls.
126
I'm more influenced by my own interests than anyone else's. Writers have to entertain themselves, or they can't entertain anyone else.
201
I try not to worry about rewriting books that worked well the first time. I'm too busy writing new books to worry about things that are already in print.
202
What we prefer to read is sort of like sexual preference, you like what you like. Most of the time you have no clue why.
203
When sex is necessary for the plot of a book, or a character development, then I don't shy away from it. Why should I?
204
Never argue with your characters; they know themselves better than you do.
205
If people would write exactly what I wanted to read I wouldn't feel so compelled to write myself.
206
The fey in this country keep to themselves, and are a separate nation, much like the American Indians, but with even more autonomy.
207
Some people just don't seem to understand the concept of fiction. It is fiction; it ain't true, folks.
208
I am a very linear thinker, so I write beginning to end. I write hundreds of pages per book that never make it into print.
209
If I'd been easily discouraged, I could have been a one-hit wonder.
210
I am not a morning person.
211
Here's the secret to finishing that first book. Don't rewrite as you go.
212
Now that I'm being very successful, publishers are trying to mainstream me, but I'm unabashedly genre. It's what I like to read, what I like to write.
213
I started off like everyone else does, slogging but having a compulsion to put words on paper. I didn't write or read horror or fantasy, other than children's fantasy, until I was in my teens.
214
I'm not terribly fond of soapboxes.
215
I've been writing stories since I was 12. 'Writer's Digest' was one of my writing teachers, actually.
216
I went to Marion College for writing and I was kicked out of the writing school. I was asked to leave the writing program because I was corrupting the other students.
217
I guess, what I'm saying is that when I've been this surprised by my own characters and world, all bets are off.
218
For me the Anita series is built like a mystery series, which means that as much as possible each book stands alone, so you have a mystery to solve from the beginning to the end of the book.
219
Nothing wrong with making money or doing what you need to do to sell, but I think it shows when you're writing something to pay the bills and when you're writing something because it's really your version of the world.
220

The script ran 0.004 seconds.