Megan Chance Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Megan Chance's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Author Megan Chance's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 46 quotes on this page collected since December 31, 1959! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
All quotes by Megan Chance: Books Character Children Heroism War Writing more...
  • [I am more than happy to invite my five favorite fictional characters.]Roland Deschain from Stephen King's Dark Tower series. There's a whole world about Roland left to know. I've got questions. He'd have answers. So pour him a glass of wine.

    Kings   Wine   Character  
    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • I love women being the heroes of the piece. There is just something so dramatic and important about this story [The Nightingale ].

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • The material world is simply an expression of the mind; that's what so many fail to see. We're so dependent on what is before us that we discount our intuition. Yet if one dismisses instinct, how can one understand or believe in a world that exists beyond one's sight?

  • I see the emphasis on a lot of ideas and I know that's directed at me. [Megan Chance] come up with an idea, hone it, and write it. I come up with thirty ideas, flesh each one out, research each one, come up with characters, and then decide I don't like it.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • I love the idea of ordinary women making extraordinary sacrifices.

    "Kristin Hannah and Megan Chance on “The Visitant”". Interview with Adrian Liang, www.amazonbookreview.com. September 22, 2015.
  • Trying to justify a world we don't hold all the answers to is what bedevils the best of us. Sometimes it's better just to accept that things are as we see them.

  • Coming up with the idea is the worst part of writing for me.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • The woman who led [downed airmen] was named Andrée De Jongh and her story - one of heroism and peril and astounding courage - became the inspiration for my novel.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • The answers are what they are. Just because you don't like them doesn't mean they aren't true.

  • It felt like an oversight to me, something that needed to be corrected. They [women who hid Jewish children] deserved to be understood and remembered.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • I am more than happy to invite my five favorite fictional characters. Let's see. First on my list is Sam Gamgee from The Lord of The Rings. Sam is a beautiful character; in him, we find the profound heroism of an ordinary person. He epitomizes the saying that courage isn't not being afraid, courage is going anyway. I just love that.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • There were others, women with stories that were told in a quieter voice: women who hid Jewish children in their homes, putting themselves directly in harm's way to save others. Too many of them paid a terrible, unimaginable price for their heroism. And like so many women in wartime, they were largely forgotten after the war's end.There were no parades for them, very few medals, and almost no mention in the history books.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • Sight is one of the most easily deceived senses. I could make a coin disappear and your eyes would believe it gone, even if it were merely up my sleeve.

  • Thematically, we're both [with Kristin Hannah ] interested in women's experiences and women's stories, and until now, you've mostly dealt with how it feels to be a wife/mother/sister/name your poison in today's world. But this story [The Nightingale ] is told from the perspective of two sisters during the German occupation of France in WWII.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • I have to admit that WWII France was not at all on my radar for Kristin Hannah.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • You learned to run from what you feel, and that's why you have nightmares. To deny is to invite madness. To accept is to control.

  • In the end, the best part of the whole book [The Nightingale ] to me was the research, reading about the courageous, ordinary French women who put their lives on the line to save others. It was really inspirational.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • Impatient men are generous ones. Or haven't you learned that by now?

  • [ The Nightingale ]ended up being a huge undertaking - a daunting amount of research on a subject that many people know intimately, a country I had not yet been to when I first started planning the book, an entire war.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • I know that sounds ineffective and daunting, but it [throw hundreds of pages away] is actually my favorite part of the writing process.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • Calling it lunacy makes it easier to explain away the things we don't understand.

  • In the end, there's only one thing you can believe. Bodies are honest; they don't lie.

  • The only truth was whatever you could make someone believe.

  • Historical tends to be my bailiwick.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • People forget that old women were young once, but d'you think we old women forget? In my heart, I'm still thirty.

  • Of course, there are hundreds of novels and authors that have influenced me. But to choose three, they are: Stephen King/The Stand (and really most of his books); Anne Rice/The Witching Hour; and Pat Conroy/The Prince of Tides. These authors write my favorite kind of book - epic feel, gorgeous prose, unique characters, and a pace that keeps you turning the pages. From them, I learned a lot about characterization, pacing, prose, voice, and originality.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • I had read a lot of books on World War II, but I didn't know that downed airmen had hiked over the frozen peaks of the Pyrenees Mountains in shoes that didn't fit, in clothes that weren't warm enough, with German and Spanish patrols searching for them.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • In doing the research, I found myself consumed by a single, overwhelming question, as relevant today as it was seventy years ago: When would I, as a wife and mother, risk my life - and more importantly, my child's life - to save a stranger? That question is at the very heart of The Nightingale. I hope that everyone who reads the novel will ask themselves the question.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • To be honest, I wrote so many drafts of this book [ The Nightingale ] and changed the characters so many times; the real surprise is that I finished the book at all.

    Source: www.omnivoracious.com
  • I do not often follow my characters off on tangents or change my story on a whim. I have an outline which I follow quite sternly...for a good long while. Then it turns out in some way to be insurmountably wrong and I am forced to re-think every component. Usually at this point I throw hundreds of pages away.

    "Kristin Hannah and Megan Chance on 'The Nightingale'". Interview With Erin Kodicek, www.amazonbookreview.com. January 28, 2015.
Page 1 of 2
  • 1
  • 2
  • We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 46 quotes from the Author Megan Chance, starting from December 31, 1959! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
    Megan Chance quotes about: Books Character Children Heroism War Writing