Deborah Harkness quotes:

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  • I teach 18- to 21-year-olds - the 'Harry Potter' generation. They grew up as voracious readers, reading books in this exploding genre. But at some point, I would love for them to give Umberto Eco or A.S. Byatt a try. I hope 'A Discovery of Witches' will serve as a kind of stepping-stone.

  • For me, a $20 wine that drinks like a $40 wine in terms of complexity and interest is a value, while a $5 wine that is not very good is not a value at all in my opinion.

  • The most beautiful experience we can have is the mysterious. It is the fundamental emotion that stands at the cradle of true art and true science. Whoever does not know it and can no longer wonder, is as good as dead, and his eyes are dimmed (Albert Einstein)

  • Witches are the kind of more traditional, home and family, craft people - so they're the ones who are making things; crocheting shawls and things like that. But then they also have that slightly confident, dangerous, edge. I always see them as having very extreme hair, either amazingly beautiful straight hair or kind of wild.

  • My niece was very much caught up in the vampire craze for young adults, and she thought having a vampire boyfriend would be a cool thing. What do you do on a first date? The more I thought about it, the more fun I had imagining what you'd serve a vampire for dinner.

  • I really love helping students and helping them empathize with people who lived a really long time ago. That's one of the highlights of working in fiction.

  • Within days they'd formed an unholy alliance with a foppish young French vampire in the Garden District who had implausibly golden hair and a streak of ruthlessness as wide as the Mississippi

  • Se Souvenir du passe, et qu'il ya un avenir: Remember the past, and that there is a future.

  • Pamela Smith and Benjamin Schmidt have gathered together a wide-ranging and provocative set of original essays that successfully demonstrate how contingent the process of making knowledge was during a period of fundamental epistemological change. This is a finely crafted and conceptualized collection.

  • Cheap wine is defined by its price, and it depends on personal spending limits. So for me, any wine under $10 is cheap.

  • I'm a storyteller, and I have really good material to work with: I've been studying magic and the occult since about 1983.

  • My experiences thus far had me planning to throttle the first Tudor historian I met upon my return for gross dereliction of duty.

  • Memories were short and history unkind. It was the way of the world.

  • I'd studied 16th century science and magic. I thought it was strange that people were interested in the same kinds of things my research was about. The more I thought about it, the more intriguing it became and pretty soon I was writing a novel about a reluctant witch and a 1500-year-old vampire.

  • There were no vampires of note in Western literature until about the 18th century. But they tell us where we park our anxieties, whether its over-powerful women, death or damnation. We make our own monsters.

  • The world of scholarship is much more measured in its appreciation and also its criticism than the world of popular literature.

  • These days vampires gravitated toward particle accelerators, projects to decode the genome, and molecular biology. Once they had flocked to alchemy, anatomy, and electricity. If it went bang, involved blood, or promised to unlock the secrets of the universe, there was sure to be a vampire around.

  • The plain truth is that the period I study is the 16th century, and they were absolutely obsessed with witches and spiritual beings.

  • I trust my wife's judgementThat's what Philippe says about Granny, just before all hell breaks loose.

  • My ideas about vampires may by romantic, but your attitudes toward women need a major overhaul.

  • Los secretos, como los muertos, no siempre permanecen enterrados.

  • Deja de ser perfecta. Intenta ser realista para que se produzca un cambio

  • It was a brutal picture, a tug-of-war between two equal but opposing impulses. It had the ring of truth, however,

  • As a historian, I love every little detail, but whole long passages about wood paneling and journeys on horseback and every stop at every inn had to go out the window. I decided the history in the books should be like spice in a soup - a little went a long way. Like cilantro.

  • A lot of our assumptions of the world are fairly cynical, fairly negative, and assume the worst. What our reading tastes show - in this rush to fantasy, romance, whatever - is that we actually still want to believe in a world of possibility, in a world of mystery.

  • She was like a camera that had been chronically out of focus until someone came by and twisted the lenses into alignment.

  • A ma vie de coer entier.Mon debut et ma fin. Se souvenir du passe, et qu'il ya un avenir. My whole heart for my whole life.With an alpha and an omega: my beginning and my end.Remember the past, and that there is a future.

  • I realised that today we are very much interested in reading about subjects that would have also interested people in the 1500s: ghosts, demons and things that go bump in the night.

  • I want a simple, ordinary life . . . like humans enjoy.

  • Gallowglass returned to Sporrengasse with two vampires and a pretzel.

  • I'm a professional non-fiction reader, that's what I do. But in my 20s we had our own vampire and witch moment, courtesy of Anne Rice, whose books I read and loved.

  • Films are wonderful but they do fix an identity. I can't read 'Pride and Prejudice' anymore, for instance, without imaging Colin Firth as Mr. Darcy.

  • Once upon a time, about 10 years ago, I thought maybe I could write a mystery series about a midwife in Elizabethan England. I had an elaborately convoluted title and an elaborately convoluted plotline, and at that point I got stupendously bored.

  • Magic provides a way of still having room for possibilities, an unlimited sense of what the world offers. Magic is always there when science is found wanting.

  • I couldn't resist hiding some historical details and a few clues relevant to the plot and characters of 'A Discovery of Witches' throughout the pages of the novel.

  • All that children need is love, a grown-up to take responsibility for them, and a soft place to land.

  • You persist in this romantic vision of what it is to be a vampire, but despite my best efforts to curb it I have a taste for blood.

  • Yes, I see that you are behaving like a prince but that doesn't mean you won't behave like a devil at the first opportunity.

  • It is a blessing as well as a burden to love so much that you can hurt so badly when love is gone.

  • Scholars do one of two things when they discover information that doesn't fit what they already know. Either they sweep it aside so it doesn't bring their cherished theories into question or they focus on it with laserlike intensity and try to get to the bottom of the mystery.

  • If the butterfly wings its way to the sweet light that attracts it, it's only because it doesn't know that the fire can consume it.

  • Her bark is worse than her bite.

  • I was planning on starting a new file on my computer with the title "Phrases That Sound One Way to Witches but Mean Something Else to Vampires.

  • That evening, rowing on the quiet river as sunset turned to dusk, I saw an occasional smoky smudge on the towpath, always slightly ahead of me, like a dark star guiding me home.

  • Desire urges me on as fear bridles me" Bruno.

  • With knot of one, the spell's begun. With knot of two, the spell be true. With knot of three, the spell is free. With knot of four, the power is stored. With knot of five, the spell with thrive. With knot of six, this spell I fix.

  • Remember the past - and await the future.

  • It begins with absence and desire. It begins with blood and fear. It begins with a discovery of witches.

  • His full name is Matthew Gabriel Philippe Bertrand Sebastien de Clermont. He was also a very good Sebastien, and a passable Gabriel. He hates Bertrand and will not answer to Philippe.

  • We kissed each other, long and deep, while my legs opened like the covers of a book.

  • Be yourself-- Matthew Clairmont. Complete with your sharp vampire teeth and your scary mother, your test tubes full of blood and your DNA, your infuriating bossiness and your maddening sense of smell.

  • Somewhere in the center of my soul, a rusty chain began to unwind. It freed itself, link by link, from where it had rested, unobserved, waiting for him. My hands, which had been balled up and pressed against his chest, unfurled with it. The chain continued to drop, to an unfathomable depth where there was nothing but darkness and Matthew. At last it snapped to its full length, anchoring me to a vampire. Despite the manuscript, despite the fact that my hands contained enough voltage to run a microwave, and despite the photograph, as long as I was connected to him, I was safe.

  • English vampires may not be as well behaved around witches as the American ones are.

  • Sorry, we've got ghosts.

  • And happiness is always louder than sadness.

  • I saw the logic that they used, and the death of a thousand cuts as experimental scientists slowly chipped away at the belief that the world was an inexplicably powerful, magical place. Ultimately they failed, though. The magic never really went away. It waited, quietly, for people to return to it when they found the science wanting.

  • I know,I can smell it, too,

  • As fast as I can tell there are only two emotions that keep the world spinning year after year...One is fear. The other is desire.

  • In this room we understand why this war might be fought...it's about our common belief that no one has the right to tell two creatures that they cannot love each other--no matter what their species.

  • the first requirement of war: allies must not kill each other.

  • Occasio praeceps, experimentum periculosum, iudicium difficile."..' Opportunity is fleeting, experiment dangerous, and judgement difficult.

  • Sir. My lord. Master Roydon." The young man blurted out most available titles except for "Your Majesty" and "Prince of Darkness." These were implied nonetheless.

  • You do angry. I just saw it. And you left at least one hole in my carpet to prove it.

  • Wordlessly I looked back at him, astonished that a kiss on the palm could be so intimate.

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