Jeffery Deaver quotes:

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  • Certainly going back to Sherlock Holmes we have a tradition of forensic science featured in detective stories.

  • It means working harder to do the research but I don't really mind - I don't think I have what it takes to chase criminals through back alleys and wade through blood at crime scenes.

  • The easy answer is that writing novels is a lot more fun than practicing law.

  • Generally my typical books have lots of twists and turns a big surprise ending and then usually another surprise at the end and ideally, as in Garden of Beasts, we get to the very end and we find at the last few pages that there's yet another surprise.

  • I was editor of my high school literary magazine and a reporter for the school newspaper.

  • In suspense novels even subplots about relationships have to have conflict.

  • Of course, all writers draw upon their personal experiences in describing day-to-day life and human relationships, but I tend to keep my own experiences largely separate from my stories.

  • I've always written, all my life, and when I was very young I developed an interest in poetry.

  • I've often said that there's no such thing as writer's block, the problem is idea block

  • I've often said that there's no such thing as writer's block; the problem is idea block. When I find myself frozen-whether I'm working on a brief passage in a novel or brainstorming about an entire book-it's usually because I'm trying to shoehorn an idea into the passage or story where it has no place.

  • But one does not make living writing poetry unless you're a professor, and one frankly doesn't get a lot of girls as a poet.

  • I like the way words go together and I like the gamesmanship of writing poetry. It is such a challenge.

  • Rule one: Write about settings you're familiar with.

  • Collins masterfully blends fact and fiction...transcends the historical thriller.

  • Hardcover books are fairly expensive these days and to read one requires a significant commitment of time in our busy society. So I want to make sure that when readers buy one of my books they get something they're familiar with.

  • The best way to learn about writing is to study the work of other writers you admire.

  • If you have a craftsman's command of the language and basic writing techniques you'll be able to write - as long as you know what you want to say.

  • I've often said that there's no such thing as writer's block; the problem is idea block.

  • In other words, the people who populate my books are more than caricatures.

  • I spend eight months outlining and researching the novel before I begin to write a single word of the prose.

  • I spend about eight months researching and outlining my book.

  • Six Seconds is a great read. Echoing Ludlum and Forsythe, author Mofina has penned a big, solid international thriller that grabs your gut -- and your heart -- in the opening scenes and never lets go.

  • I liked the challenge of writing in a very concise structure in which both meaning and form are important.

  • You think publishing is tough but the music world is ten times tougher.

  • The recent fascination, I think, reflects the shift in approach by law enforcement officials to embrace technology as wholeheartedly as the rest of the world.

  • If you have a craftsman's command of the language and basic writing techniques you'll be able to write - as long as you know what you want to say

  • I write pretty much anywhere - on planes, in hotel rooms, anywhere in my house.

  • My books are primarily plot driven but the best plot in the world is useless if you don't populate them with characters that readers can care about.

  • I also try very hard to create characters - both heroes and villains - with psychological depth.

  • In general, I think, less is more, and that if a reader stops reading because a book is too icky then I've failed in my obligation to the readers.

  • When you work alone, you need to socialize at some level.

  • She was reflecting back on a truth she had learned over the years: that people heard what they wanted to hear, saw what they wanted, believed what they wanted.

  • Ideally, I like to integrate the human issues into the suspense story itself.

  • To answer that I have to describe what I think is my responsibility as a thriller writer: To give my readers the most exciting roller coaster ride of a suspense story I can possibly think of.

  • Trying to write books with a subject matter or in a genre or style you're not familiar with is the best way to find the Big Block looming.

  • So I work hard to present the human side of my characters while not neglecting the plot.

  • When it comes time to write the book itself I'll shut the lights out, picture the scene I'm about to write then close my eyes and go at it. Yes, I can touch type.

  • Of course, I write crime stories, and I have to describe violence and the aftermath of violence.

  • She believed not in divine salvation but in the proposition that we poor mortals are fully capable of saving ourselves, if conditions and inclinations are right, and the evidence of this potential is found in the smallest of gestures, like the uncertain resting of a large hand on a bony shoulder.

  • Readers are paramount. I live to write books for them.

  • It's becoming apparent that I like bad boys. That's one of my problems. They've all been bad boys. You're one too. You're a bad boy. But, I think you're a good bad boy.

  • People with children and people with their own business always pick up a ringing phone.

  • People want to avoid the past. I suppose that's natural. When we tally up all we've said and done over the years, despite the wonderful memories, the regrets may be fewer but stand out more prominently, glowing coals that we can never quite extinguish, try though we might

  • For me a thriller is a very carefully structured story.

  • The outline is 95 percent of the book. Then I sit down and write, and that's the easy part.

  • In the shaded portions where the two spheres of different lives meet, certain fundamentals- moods, loves, fears, angers- can't be hidden. That's the contract.

  • And life changes. Maybe just a little, maybe a lot. And at some point, it just isn't worth the fight to fix it.

  • Sometimes you can't be what you ought to be, you can't have what you ought to have.

  • That's the past for you. Not only does it come back at the most unexpected, and inconvenient, times but it's set in stone.

  • I think a lot of young aspiring writers get misdirected; they think 'I ought to write this, even though I enjoy reading that'. What you have to do is write what you enjoy reading.

  • Too much screaming in Congress. Too much screaming everywhere.

  • Breathtakingly real and utterly compelling, Immoral dishes up page-turning psychological suspense while treating us lucky readers to some of the most literate and stylish writing you'll find anywhere today.

  • Robert Rotenberg does for Toronto what Ian Rankin does for Edinburgh.

  • Throat clutching from the outset! The Never List stands as a sterling example of psychological thriller writing at its best. Cancel appointments and give up on sleep. It's that kind of book.

  • We have years to converse with someone, to blurt and rant, to explain our desires and anger and regrets - and oh how we squander those moments.

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