Mystery Writers Quotes
Collection of top 26 famous quotes about Mystery Writers
Mystery Writers Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Mystery Writers quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Writers are like onions, layers upon layers upon layers.
— Luke Taylor
The wit of a graduate student is like champagne. Canadian champagne.
— Robertson Davies
(M)ysteries in fiction are seldom as insoluble as those in life, as most writers can't resist the lure of omniscience.
— Dennis McFadden
That's what I love most about writers
they're such lousy actors. — Vincent H. O'Neil
they're such lousy actors. — Vincent H. O'Neil
In one study of ten countries,14 a higher consumption of calcium was associated with a higher - not lower - risk of bone fracture (Chart 10.3
— T. Colin Campbell
Fame is a skittish jade, more fickle even than Fortune, and apt to shy, and bolt, and plunge away on very trifling causes.
— Anthony Trollope
My mind may be American but my heart is British.
— T. S. Eliot
I've painted in the past, but I only average about one painting a year, and the last painting I did, I actually really liked.
— Mike Mignola
There are two kinds of folks who sit around thinking about how to kill people: psychopaths and mystery writers.
— Richard Castle
Don't forget to make a curve when the road makes a curve!
— Mehmet Murat Ildan
That a mystery must have a resolution is obviously not a requirement of nature. It is, in fact, another deceit of writers
— Manu Joseph
With your visualization intact, commit to act.
— Lorii Myers
Mastering facts is knowledge. Mastering knowledge is wisdom.
— Debasish Mridha
To go where the King goes afoot (i.e. to the stool).
— George Herbert
We were so young, so in love, and so in debt.
— Michelle Obama
Actors are all about entrances, but writers are all about exits.
— Vincent H. O'Neil
If we must encounter each other, let's do it the old way - in the dark, by the fire, our breaths bated, the world a big black mystery beyond us.
— Meghan Tifft
The mysterious does not spell itself out in capital letters, as many writers believe, but is always between, an interstice.
— Julio Cortazar
A well-bred man is always sociable and complaisant.
— Michel De Montaigne