Donoghue Quotes
Collection of top 100 famous quotes about Donoghue
Donoghue Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Donoghue quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
That's what you got for being a servant of no ambition: a shrunken life, hung up like a gibbet as a warning to others.
— Emma Donoghue
Happiness as un-pin-downable as a louse: you feel the tickle of its passage but your fingers close on nothing.
— Emma Donoghue
I was always kind of serious. It's nice to be able to play a complete bad boy who's the polar opposite to who I am.
— Colin O'Donoghue
The truth of art consists in its power to break the monopoly that those in power exercise by defining what is real.
— Denis Donoghue
I'm really not one of these procrastinators who cleans the house in order to put off writing, but life gets in the way.
— Emma Donoghue
I thought humans were or weren't, I didn't know someone could be a bit human. Then what are his other bits?
— Emma Donoghue
You're meant to have an unhappy childhood to be a writer, but there's a lot to be said for a very happy one that just lets you get on with it.
— Emma Donoghue
Life is one big minefield, and the only place that isn't a minefield is the place they make the mines.
— Michael O'Donoghue
I think it would be a shame for any writer to let their publishers in any way corral them into a single genre.
— Emma Donoghue
She gets sick of things fast, it's from being an adult.
— Emma Donoghue
People move around so much in the world, things get lost.
— Emma Donoghue
Knowing that language has done so much, we want to believe that it can do everything.
— Denis Donoghue
There is no good reason to suppose that whatever can be felt can be expressed in words, or indeed in any articulate form.
— Denis Donoghue
Licorice is the liver of candy.
— Michael O'Donoghue
The true essence of comedy is a baby seal hunt.
— Michael O'Donoghue
The great thing about a short story is that it doesn't have to trawl through someone's whole life; it can come in glancingly from the side.
— Emma Donoghue
Sometimes you must shed your skin to save it.
— Emma Donoghue
Constriction causes pain, relaxation causes happiness.
— Sean O'Donoghue Morgan
It was easy to lose a part of your body, it seemed to her; there were so many ways, it was a wonder anybody reached their death intact.
— Emma Donoghue
When people write to me with stories, they are never ones that work for me. There's something mysterious about which ones catch you.
— Emma Donoghue
Who knows what we all are before anything happens?
— Emma Donoghue
... where there's one there's ten.'
That's crazy math. — Emma Donoghue
That's crazy math. — Emma Donoghue
In Room I was safe and Outside is the scary.
— Emma Donoghue
I come out of an academic background, and I'm aware that what I'm doing is simultaneously research and fiction. I want to meet both those obligations.
— Emma Donoghue
If you're sorry, folks can tell. No use piling on the verbiage.
— Emma Donoghue
Coffee's the most important thing they sell because most of us need it to keep us going, like gas in the car.
— Emma Donoghue
Nowadays 'invisibility' was supposed to be the big problem, but the way I saw it was, all that mattered was to be visible to yourself.
— Emma Donoghue
I think ultimately the film 'Room' is a kind of hymn to motherhood and to the everyday heroism of parents who find their smiles in terrible times.
— Emma Donoghue
It stands to reason that those who assault nature will suffer at her hands in the end.
— Emma Donoghue
I have tried to use memory and invention together, like two hands engaged in the same muddy work of digging up the past.
— Emma Donoghue
Alice says she can't explain herself because she's not herself, she knows who she was this morning but she changed several times since then.
— Emma Donoghue
So then she took me home, or I took her home, or we were both somehow taken to the closest thing.
— Emma Donoghue
She was with Jude so rarely that when she was, every cell of her body rang with grateful knowledge of it.
— Emma Donoghue
Books are the air I breathe, so I don't notice the seasons.
— Emma Donoghue
I think she was too tired to play anymore, she was in a hurry to get to Heaven so she didn't wait, why didn't she wait for me?
— Emma Donoghue
You know who you belong to, Jack?"
"Yeah."
"Yourself."
He's wrong, actually, I belong to Ma. — Emma Donoghue
"Yeah."
"Yourself."
He's wrong, actually, I belong to Ma. — Emma Donoghue
I have gained a lot of perspective from the places I have traveled too and the people I have been fortunate enough to meet.
— Danny O'Donoghue
Please," he added. "I meant to say, please. I've thought it all through. I've thought of nothing else. I haven't read a book in weeks!
— Emma Donoghue
Real loneliness is having no one to miss. Think yourself lucky you've known something worth missing.
— Emma Donoghue
Writers should be applauded for their ability to make things up.
— Emma Donoghue
Making people laugh is the lowest form of comedy.
— Michael O'Donoghue
Maybe I'm a human, but I'm a me-and-Ma as well.
— Emma Donoghue
Once you put yourself in the hands of the government, you could end up in Utah.
— Michael O'Donoghue
What writing ROOM taught me was that I know exactly how to be the perfect mother, but I'm not willing to do it for more than ten minutes at a time.
— Emma Donoghue
I was tired," she says. "I made a mistake."
"You're not tired anymore?"
She doesn't say anything. Then she says, "I am. But it's OK. — Emma Donoghue
"You're not tired anymore?"
She doesn't say anything. Then she says, "I am. But it's OK. — Emma Donoghue
I love to travel, don't like the getting there 'planes' but love it when I arrive.
— Danny O'Donoghue
Fate was faceless, life arbitrary, a tale told by an idiot.
— Emma Donoghue
In my experience of ward nursing, two shifts are more conducive to sleep than three." "But
— Emma Donoghue
For all the books in his possession, he still failed to read the stories written plain as day in the faces of the people around him.
— Emma Donoghue
Men never feel quite the same about a woman's body once they know it's done that thing: widened and torn to push out a baby's head.
— Emma Donoghue
Sentences swallowed and sung back and swallowed all over again. She was made entirely out of words.
— Emma Donoghue
In the publishing world, most editors are probably women. So I don't see the publishing world as a male-dominated one, especially within fiction.
— Emma Donoghue
I think buddy is man talk for sweetie.
— Emma Donoghue
Would anyone remember the story of Godiva if she lowered Coventry's taxes without taking her clothes off?
— Daniel Donoghue
I got in the habit of giving away a book as soon as I've finished it because I lived in a housing co-op at Cambridge and had no space to keep books.
— Emma Donoghue
Identity politics are wearisome; you don't want to go on speaking for any one group as a writer.
— Emma Donoghue
You cannot predict literary success; the only way you can possibly aim for it is to do your thing and do it well.
— Emma Donoghue
Sometimes words were like glass that broke in her mouth.
— Emma Donoghue
Was interesting." "Is that what your ma says to say when you don't like something?" She smiles a bit. "I taught her that." "Is she dying by now?
— Emma Donoghue
taking the killers, always two at night because she says pain is like water, it spreads out as soon as she lies down. She
— Emma Donoghue
Vulnerability is strength, surrender is victory.
— Sean O'Donoghue Morgan
Everyone's got a different story.
— Emma Donoghue
It's painful to consider anything but writing.
— Emma Donoghue
When I was a little kid I thought like a little kid, but now I'm five I know everything
— Emma Donoghue
She wants to slap everyone today, to pick up the whole sweat-slick City and punch its lights out.
— Emma Donoghue
Television doesn't want to admit it has those dreadful roach ads on anyway.
— Michael O'Donoghue
I guess the feminism in "Room" springs to mind most.
— Emma Donoghue
No point my telling you he's not worth it, I suppose ... I've seen enough men in my time. Whoever he is, he's not worth what you'll pay.
— Emma Donoghue
Perhaps there is no providence, no fate, no grand plan, she thinks now. Perhaps we dig our own traps and lie down in them.
— Emma Donoghue
I don't like a clever toilet looking at our butts.
— Emma Donoghue
I'm a huge planner, more and more so as the years go by.
— Emma Donoghue
It's you that matters though, just you.
— Emma Donoghue
Nothing important has ever come out of San Francisco, Rice-a-Roni aside.
— Michael O'Donoghue
A memoir is always the most authentic telling of a situation, but a novel gets to different places.
— Emma Donoghue
I'll be in Heaven getting your room ready.
— Emma Donoghue
When she pulled the ribbon out of her mattress, at first light the next morning, it was brown.
— Emma Donoghue
Not beautiful, not brilliant, no longer young.
— Emma Donoghue
Everybody's damaged by something.
— Emma Donoghue
One never imagined that as the decades went by, one might drift into an unbounded country. It struck Lib now how alone in the world she was.
— Emma Donoghue
If I was made of cake I'd eat myself before somebody else could.
— Emma Donoghue
I've certainly seen stats that if you have a woman director or a woman screenwriter, the number of female characters goes way up.
— Emma Donoghue
You only live once and, usually, not even then.
— Michael O'Donoghue
Careful. Why do persons only say that after the hurt?
— Emma Donoghue
I am clumsy, a late and nervous driver, and despise all sports except a little gentle dancing or yoga.
— Emma Donoghue
Ma's still nodding. "You're the one who matters, though. Just you."
I shake my head till it's wobbling because there's no just me. — Emma Donoghue
I shake my head till it's wobbling because there's no just me. — Emma Donoghue
I think therapy interferes with the creative process. It takes off the edge.
— Michael O'Donoghue