Colleen McCullough Quotes
Top 58 wise famous quotes and sayings by Colleen McCullough
Colleen McCullough Famous Quotes & Sayings
Discover top inspirational quotes from Colleen McCullough on Wise Famous Quotes.
My books and other works are my legacy, and it's a great comfort to know that mine is a legacy of pleasure for other people.
orgy of sampling Europe's charms, she never went back, and that was strange. In his experience people always
Living's for those of us who failed. Greedy God, gathering in the good ones, leaving the world to the rest of us, to rot.
Maybe no great man is virtuous. Or good. Perhaps a man rich in those qualities by definition is barred from greatness.
There's a hell of a lot of horny people out there who are not being gratified in the way they should be.
I have an editor in my head, that's why I can't read Harry Potter, because Rowling is such a lousy writer.
All that appearance business is crap, and I'm not even going to be bothered arguing with you about it.
Yet there's something ominous about turning sixty-five. Suddenly old age is not a phenomenon which will occur; it has occurred.
I escaped the torture of my childhood home by reading. To this day it is still one of my greatest pleasures.
The law should not be a huge and weighty slab which falls upon a man and squashes him into a uniform shape, for men are not uniform.
In early draft it never satisfied me, and that was when it clicked into place and it went so well as a diary.
He owe his wife a debt he couldn't hope to pay with any coin save one: open the cage and let the bird fly.
My husband says it is very good that I have very tiny feet, because they're easier to get in my mouth.
She looked like the sort of woman most men would want to get to know because they weren't sure what went on inside.
We're working-class people, which means we don't get rich or have maids. Be content with what you are and what you have.
Age brought wisdom, but it also brought a genuine gratitude for the happiness of sharing life with someone as much liked as loved.
But work used to be the lot of every man, and now it is rapidly becoming an aristocratic privilege. Men nowadays are more often paid not to work.
That's the purpose of old age ... To give us a breathing space before we die, in which to see why we did what we did.
But I'll pin you to the wall on your own weakness, I'll make you sell yourself like any painted whore." Mary Carson to Father Ralph.
The feeling of coming home, when she didn't want to come home any more than she wanted the liability of love.
You say you love me, but you have no idea what love is; you're just mouthing words you've memorized because you think they sound good!