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Throughout my teenage years, I read 'A Christmas Carol' by Charles Dickens every December. It was a story that never failed to excite me, for as well as being a Dickens enthusiast, I have always loved ghost stories.
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I suppose books are my real passion in life.
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Children's authors don't talk down or patronise their younger readers.
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I am opposed to war, to killing people, to any kind of hatred and violence.
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War today is such a more visible thing. We see it on television, on CNN. In 1914, war was a concept.
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I don't buy into the idea that an Irish writer should write about Ireland, or a gay writer should write about being gay.
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Unless you're very boring, I think most people who've lived long enough have something in their past which will never go away.
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I can remember being eight, and I like writing about that age of innocence when children still have a sense of wonder.
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What makes a classic is difficult to define. It's entirely subjective, of course. And the term is employed far too promiscuously.
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People try to glorify war, particularly those who aren't actually fighting in them. People tend to make heroes of those who are fighting in them.
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I move between the two: I write an adult novel, and then I write a children's book. I quite enjoy that. It's a nice change of pace each time.
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It's a wonderful thing to write for children.
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I hope for so much from every book I read. And time and again, I find myself disappointed. I look across my bookshelves and see hundreds of titles which in my memory seem merely mediocre or second-rate. Only occasionally does a novel appear for which I feel a lasting passion, a book that I think could in time become a classic.
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I wrote my first book at 20, but my whole focus from about the age of 12 was to be a writer.