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It was the month of May and there was warm sunshine dripping through the holes between the clouds, like the sky was a broken blue bowl and a child was trying to keep honey in it.
Chris Cleave
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Chris Cleave
Age: 51
Born: 1973
Born: May 14
Journalist
Novelist
Writer
London
England
Children
Warm
Dripping
Trying
Sky
Bowl
Like
Blue
Bowls
Months
Honey
Broken
Month
Child
Sunshine
Keep
Holes
May
Clouds
More quotes by Chris Cleave
My whole life is my work.
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It was hard not to be full of hope
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I think that there's something extremely beautiful about the Olympic ideal and its motto - 'Swifter, higher, stronger' - it's such a beautiful motto, and it celebrates everything which is the antithesis of death and dissolution and entropy.
Chris Cleave
I write in the novel's afterword that our recent wars finish not with victory or defeat but with a calendar draw-down date and a presumption that we shall never be reconciled with the enemy.
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I was carrying two cargoes. Yes, one of them was horror, but the other one was hope.
Chris Cleave
And thus love makes fools of us all.
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Nobody has the time to sit down and explain the first world from first principles.
Chris Cleave
Everyone carries the weight of WWII with them in their recent family history, and yet it is rarely spoken about within families, because veterans and survivors don't tend to talk.
Chris Cleave
People wonder how they are ever going to change their lives, but really it is frighteningly easy.
Chris Cleave
Life is savagely unfair. It ignores our deep-seated convictions and places a disproportionate emphasis on the decisions we make in split seconds.
Chris Cleave
I know that the hopes of this whole human world can fit inside one soul.
Chris Cleave
Our stories are the tellers of us.
Chris Cleave
However long the moon disappears, someday it must shine again.
Chris Cleave
WWII was, without exaggeration, the biggest event in all of human history, and it is still within living memory.
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I planned how I would kill myself in the time of Churchill (stand under bombs), Victoria (throw myself under a horse), and Henry the Eighth (marry Henry the Eighth)- Little Bee
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My maternal grandmother was in London during the Blitz. Indeed, the man she was dating before she met my grandfather was killed beside her in a cinema, in 1941, when a bomb came through the roof - a tragedy in which she herself was badly wounded.
Chris Cleave
Looking after a very sick child was the Olympics of parenting.
Chris Cleave
Yet war doesn't end with armistice, it only ends with forgiveness and reconciliation.
Chris Cleave
I wanted to look at the differences between how we fought then and how we fight now, because the current lack of closure generates a state of psychological unease that is interesting to acknowledge and examine.
Chris Cleave
[My maternal grandmother ] was a teacher in London and elsewhere during the war, although the children she taught were not the lost children who feature in the novel - those come from my research.
Chris Cleave