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

Thomas Perry [1963-0] German
Rank: 103
Musician, Novelist


Thomas Perry is an American mystery and thriller novelist. He received a 1983 Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for Best First Novel.

Patience

QuoteTagsRank
If I don't have a project going, I sit down and begin to write something - a character sketch, a monologue, a description of some sight, or even just a list of ideas.
101
Reading a novel in which all characters illustrate patience, hard work, chastity, and delayed gratification could be a pretty dull experience. Patience
102
Being comfortable isn't the way to learn to expand your abilities.
103
But at the same time, the commonplace statement about them is true: every character is the hero of his own story. Each has a justification for his actions that is convincing to him. It's fun to give these people voices.
104
I do like to explore evil characters in my books.
105
I don't have dry seasons, because I don't allow them.
106
Much of what we do in life has a huge component of luck.
107
Once you have invented a character with three dimensions and a voice, you begin to realize that some of the things you'd like him to do to further your plot are things that such a person wouldn't, or couldn't, do.
108
The characters you refer to as predatory and unsavory are useful. They're the ones who make a novel into a thriller. They're active, and most of the common virtues, the signs of a good person, are not.
109
I think we did a great job of putting together a program that would have made good e-books available had people been buying e-books in any real numbers.
110
All writers are mimics, and I'm not interested in picking up somebody else's style or voice.
111
Contrary to what many writers imply about the process, nobody forces a writer to sell his work to the film industry.
112
I do have to earn a living, so I'm conscious of probable reactions from readers, but the most important one is still the awareness that if I'm not enjoying a story, the reader won't either.
113
I do hope to bring Jane Whitefield back before too long.
114
I do try not to spend much time reading in the suspense genre.
115
I do want to write about Jane Whitefield again, but only when I have a good enough idea - something I've figured out about her that's news and that's worth a reader's time.
116
I don't consciously do anything to maintain a unique voice.
117
I don't think the problem is that people don't read enough mystery books, but that people don't read.
118
I had been writing fiction since I was in eighth grade, because I loved it.
119
I held a variety of jobs - most notably ten years working in universities - and kept on writing.
120
If you'll think about various series you've read, can you think of any instance in which, say, the tenth volume of the series is notably better than the first nine? I can't.
121
It was a lot of fun, and writing a series is comfortable. It's almost like having a secure job.
122
It's important, I think, for a writer of fiction to maintain an awareness of the pace and shape of the book as he's writing it. That is, he should be making an object, not chattering.
123
There are days when I intentionally don't write. For instance, I never write when I'm traveling, because travel is a situation where I can learn more by looking and listening than by working.
124
What I look for in any character, good or bad, is whether I can hear him speak. If I can imagine him that clearly, then I can write about him.
125
When I write a book, I'm making it the best book I can.
126
Yes, in my books I do edit myself to keep from becoming the Village Explainer.
201
You have very accurately described the difficulty of presenting my books on film: many of my characters are alone most of the time, and when they do talk, what they say is mostly lies. That can make for a pretty confusing film.
202

The script ran 0.005 seconds.