Kazuo Ishiguro Quotes About Writing

We have collected for you the TOP of Kazuo Ishiguro's best quotes about Writing! Here are collected all the quotes about Writing starting from the birthday of the Novelist – November 8, 1954! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 12 sayings of Kazuo Ishiguro about Writing. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • Screenplays I didn't really care about, journalism, travel books, getting my writer friends to write about their dreams or something. I just determined to write the books I had to write.

    "Living memories". Interview with Nicholas Wroe, www.theguardian.com. February 18, 2005.
  • I think I had actually served my apprenticeship as a writer of fiction by writing all those songs. I had already been through phases of autobiographical or experimental stuff.

    FaceBook post by Kazuo Ishiguro from Sep 05, 2011
  • There comes a point when you can more or less count the number of books you're going to write before you die.

    "Kazuo Ishiguro: 'I was quite ready for something that would be quite difficult for me to write'". Interview with Decca Aitkenhead, www.theguardian.com. April 26, 2009.
  • There's still a part of me that thinks I have to write a really good novel. I'm not trying to say I'm not happy with the novels I've written in the past. But it always feels to me like there's another one that I have to write that will really say what I want to say, and really paint this world that I can see hazily in my head.

  • What is difficult is the promotion, balancing the public side of a writer's life with the writing. I think that's something a lot of writers are having to face. Writers have become much more public now.

    "Kazuo Ishiguro remembers when". Interview with Adam Dunn, www.cnn.com. October 27, 2000.
  • The reason I wouldn't dare to write a Western is simply because that seems to be so much a part of American culture. Maybe if I want to write a Western enough I should try to overcome that fear, but I'll certainly feel like I'm trespassing. I feel that that is so much a part of American foundation myth, it's part of the myth of America, the American vision of what America is, which people have glorified and then challenged and then vilified.

    Source: www.guernicamag.com
  • I want my words to survive translation. I know when I write a book now I will have to go and spend three days being intensely interrogated by journalists in Denmark or wherever. That fact, I believe, informs the way I write - with those Danish journalists leaning over my shoulder.

  • I like the fact that by mimicking the way memory works, a writer can actually write in a fluid way - one solid scene doesn't have to fall on another solid scene, you can just have a fragment that then dovetails into another one that took place 30 years apart from it.

    "Kazuo Ishiguro remembers when" by Adam Dunn, www.cnn.com.
  • You could say I'd rewritten the same novel three times and I thought I had to move on. The success of the book, and then the movie, had by then also created a commercial expectation and I remember touring America and seeing people in the audiences who I thought might not want to read the books I wanted to write next. My constituency had become broader, but more mysterious to me.

    "Living memories" by Nicholas Wroe, www.theguardian.com. February 18, 2005.
  • Memory is quite central for me. Part of it is that I like the actual texture of writing through memory.

    "Kazuo Ishiguro remembers when". Interview with Adam Dunn, www.cnn.com. October 27, 2000.
  • There's a practical problem about time and energy, and a more subtle problem of what it does to a writer's head, to continually analyze why they write, where it all comes from, where it's going to.

    "Kazuo Ishiguro remembers when" by Adam Dunn, www.cnn.com.
  • I was a little concerned that a lot of people thought I wrote Merchant Ivory movies. I also thought if I was ever going to write something strange and difficult, that was the time.

    "'For me, England is a mythical place'" by Tim Adams, www.theguardian.com. February 19, 2005.
Page 1 of 1
Did you find Kazuo Ishiguro's interesting saying about Writing? We will be glad if you share the quote with your friends on social networks! This page contains Novelist quotes from Novelist Kazuo Ishiguro about Writing collected since November 8, 1954! Come back to us again – we are constantly replenishing our collection of quotes so that you can always find inspiration by reading a quote from one or another author!