Claire Tomalin Quotes
Top 52 wise famous quotes and sayings by Claire Tomalin
Claire Tomalin Famous Quotes & Sayings
Discover top inspirational quotes from Claire Tomalin on Wise Famous Quotes.
I enjoyed the whole process of learning and was always happy when autumn came and school or college started up again.
I sometimes think that, since I started writing biographies, I've had more of a life in books than I have had in my real life.
Historians will handle a much wider range of sources than a biographer and will be covering a broader spectrum of events, time, peoples.
Biographers search for traces, for evidence of activity, for signs of movement, for letters, for diaries, for photographs.
I think people are always saying things are 'over.' Fiction has been regularly 'over' since the 19th century.
I've been trying to garden all my life - it just happens that I haven't had a big garden until the past few years.
He saw the world more vividly than other people, and reacted to what he saw with laughter, horror, indignation, and sometimes sobs.
You become more tolerant when you become older. You're not interested in rapping people over the knuckles; you're interested in understanding them.
Dickens was a part of how the whole celebration of Christmas as we know it today emerged during the 19th century.
I was very priggish as a child. I saved up for a book on medieval English nunneries, for which I was despised by my friends.
As a young man, Dickens worked as a reporter in the House of Commons and hated it. He felt that all politicians spoke with the same voice.
By the time I went up to Cambridge, I was extremely quiet and well behaved, although I now meet people who remember me as not like that at all.
Dickens had more energy than anyone in the world, and he expected his sons to be like him, and they couldn't be.
Dickens never joined a political party nor put forward a political programme. He was a writer who rightly saw his power as coming through his fiction.
I'm interested in history, in trying to relate the past to the present and to understand how people thought about their problems and pleasures.