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I think that some laughter comes from escaped horror, doesn't it?
Edward St Aubyn
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Edward St Aubyn
Age: 64
Born: 1960
Born: January 14
Author
Journalist
Writer
Kernow
Edward St. Aubyn
Escaped
Horror
Laughter
Comes
Doesn
Think
Thinking
More quotes by Edward St Aubyn
Proust is a hero of mine. I read 'A la recherche' in one go, and I'm a very slow reader. It had an astonishing impact, reading it on my own and being my main company. I think Proust is the most intelligent person to ever have written a novel.
Edward St Aubyn
The Booker 2011 is of no more interest to me than the world heavyweight championship, which I'm not going to win either. It's irrelevant.
Edward St Aubyn
People never remeber happiness with the care that they lavish on preserving every detail of their suffering.
Edward St Aubyn
It seems people spend the majority of their lives believing they're dying, with the only consolation being that at one point they get to be right.
Edward St Aubyn
The thing about the 'Melrose' novels is that I have to feel they're impossible when I set out.
Edward St Aubyn
Detachment is what interests me, seeing how people couldn't have been any other way, how they were the product of forces that they had no control over.
Edward St Aubyn
I'm not trying to uncover the facts of my life but to discover the dramatic truth of the situations I was in.
Edward St Aubyn
You can only give things up once they start to let you down.
Edward St Aubyn
I see the author as the person who has written the writer, the one involved in the process of writing. And they're not necessarily friends. The writer is the one I want to reinforce the author would just feed on the reviews - so I'm in favour of starving him.
Edward St Aubyn
Everything was usual. That was depression: being stuck, clinging to an out-of-date version of oneself.
Edward St Aubyn
Irony is the hardest addiction of all. Forget heroin. Just try giving up irony, the deep-down need to mean two things at once, to be in two places at once, not to be there for the catastrophe of a fixed meaning.
Edward St Aubyn
Surely: the adverb of a man without an argument.
Edward St Aubyn
I'm really not responsible for what mental operation people have when they're reading my books other than the ones which are created by literary effects.
Edward St Aubyn