Quotes by Ian Mcewan

By concentrating on what is good in people, by appealing to their idealism and their sense of justice, and by asking them to put their faith in the future, socialists put themselves at a severe disadvantage.
– Ian Mcewan
By measuring individual human worth, the novelist reveals the full enormity of the State's crime when it sets out to crush that individuality.
– Ian Mcewan
It is not the first duty of the novelist to provide blueprints for insurrection, or uplifting tales of successful resistance for the benefit of the opposition. The naming of what is there is what is important.
– Ian Mcewan
One has to have the courage of one's pessimism.
– Ian Mcewan
Politics is the enemy of the imagination.
– Ian Mcewan
You enter a state of controlled passivity, you relax your grip and accept that even if your declared intention is to justify the ways of God to man, you might end up interesting your readers rather more in Satan.
– Ian Mcewan
What reader wants to be told what attitude to strike?
– Ian Mcewan
True intelligence requires fabulous imagination.
– Ian Mcewan
One important theme is the extent to which one can ever correct an error, especially outside any frame of religious forgiveness. All of us have done something we regret - how we manage to remove that from our conscience, or whether that's even possible, interested me.
– Ian Mcewan
My parents were keen for me to have the education they themselves never had. They weren't able to guide me towards particular books, but they encouraged me to read, which I did, randomly and compulsively.
– Ian Mcewan
London in the '70s was a pretty catastrophic dump, I can tell you. We had every kind of industrial trouble we had severe energy problems we were under constant terrorist attack from Irish terrorist groups who started a bombing campaign in English cities politics were fantastically polarized between left and right.
– Ian Mcewan
In my experience an appreciative letter from a fellow writer means a lot.
– Ian Mcewan
I think of novels in architectural terms. You have to enter at the gate, and this gate must be constructed in such a way that the reader has immediate confidence in the strength of the building.
– Ian Mcewan
I don't believe there's any inherent darkness at the center of religion at all. I think religion actually is a morally neutral force.
– Ian Mcewan
I apologize for being obvious, but every time I watch the curtain come down on even a halfway decent production of a Shakespeare play I feel a little sorrowful that I'll never know the man, or any man of such warm intelligence.
– Ian Mcewan
I actually find novels that are determined to be funny at every turn quite oppressive.
– Ian Mcewan
A twenty-one-year-old writer is likely to be inhibited by a lack of usable experience. Childhood and adolescence were something I knew.
– Ian Mcewan