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Deborah Harkness Quotes

We’ve collected the best Deborah Harkness Quotes. Use them as an inspiration.

1
I found a ‘lostmanuscript called the Book of Soyga that had once belonged to Queen Elizabeth I’s court astrologer, John Dee, in Oxford‘s Bodleian Library. Everybody thought it was the missing key to Dee’s interest in magic. Of course, it wasn’t really lost. It was there, in the catalog.
Deborah Harkness
2
Deborah Harkness
3
My niece was very much caught up in the vampire craze for young adults, and she thought having a vampire boyfriend would be a cool thing. What do you do on a first date? The more I thought about it, the more fun I had imagining what you’d serve a vampire for dinner.
Deborah Harkness
4
I couldn’t resist hiding some historical details and a few clues relevant to the plot and characters of ‘A Discovery of Witches’ throughout the pages of the novel.
Deborah Harkness
5
Once upon a time, about 10 years ago, I thought maybe I could write a mystery series about a midwife in Elizabethan England. I had an elaborately convoluted title and an elaborately convoluted plotline, and at that point I got stupendously bored.
Deborah Harkness
6
I’m a professional non-fiction reader, that’s what I do. But in my 20s we had our own vampire and witch moment, courtesy of Anne Rice, whose books I read and loved.
Deborah Harkness
7
I’m definitely a seat-of-the-pants writer.
Deborah Harkness
8
Films are wonderful but they do fix an identity. I can’t read ‘Pride and Prejudiceanymore, for instance, without imaging Colin Firth as Mr. Darcy.
Deborah Harkness
9
After finishing ‘The Book of Life,’ I needed a bit of a break from the Bishops and de Clermonts. Honestly, I wasn’t sure when – or even if! – they would capture all of my attention again.
Deborah Harkness
10
I took a course on ‘Magic, Alchemy, and Astrology‘ at Mount Holyoke, and it was a whole new awakening for me, a way of thinking about the world primarily in terms of concepts and words rather than mathematical formulas.
Deborah Harkness
11
Smart is, and has always been, sexy.
Deborah Harkness
12
I teach 18- to 21-year-olds – the ‘Harry Pottergeneration. They grew up as voracious readers, reading books in this exploding genre. But at some point, I would love for them to give Umberto Eco or A.S. Byatt a try. I hope ‘A Discovery of Witches’ will serve as a kind of stepping-stone.
Deborah Harkness
13
After 20 years of writing academic prose and lectures, it seems very familiar and straightforward to me. Writing a novel for the first time, I was reminded of just how difficult it is to figure out how to get this stuff done when you don’t really know what you’re doing.
Deborah Harkness
14
I think you can learn a lot from primary sources. ‘The Penguin Book of Witches,’ which is edited by novelist Katherine Howe, is a wonderful compilation of primary sources about witchcraft.
Deborah Harkness
15
Falling in love is really relatively easy compared to staying in love and building a family that lasts.
Deborah Harkness
16
I realised that today we are very much interested in reading about subjects that would have also interested people in the 1500s: ghosts, demons and things that go bump in the night.
Deborah Harkness
17
There were no vampires of note in Western literature until about the 18th century. But they tell us where we park our anxieties, whether its over-powerful women, death or damnation. We make our own monsters.
Deborah Harkness
18
I really love helping students and helping them empathize with people who lived a really long time ago. That’s one of the highlights of working in fiction.
Deborah Harkness
19
I’d studied 16th century science and magic. I thought it was strange that people were interested in the same kinds of things my research was about. The more I thought about it, the more intriguing it became and pretty soon I was writing a novel about a reluctant witch and a 1500-year-old vampire.
Deborah Harkness
20
I’m a storyteller, and I have really good material to work with: I’ve been studying magic and the occult since about 1983.
Deborah Harkness
21
The plain truth is that the period I study is the 16th century, and they were absolutely obsessed with witches and spiritual beings.
Deborah Harkness
22
I am so thrilled to carve out a few minutes to write that I grab it whenever I can.
Deborah Harkness
23
Magic provides a way of still having room for possibilities, an unlimited sense of what the world offers. Magic is always there when science is found wanting.
Deborah Harkness
24
For me, a $20 wine that drinks like a $40 wine in terms of complexity and interest is a value, while a $5 wine that is not very good is not a value at all in my opinion.
Deborah Harkness
25
I re-read the books I assign to my students. Each time I do, I learn something new.
Deborah Harkness
26
Cheap wine is defined by its price, and it depends on personal spending limits. So for me, any wine under $10 is cheap.
Deborah Harkness
27
I’m entranced by Amanda Lovelace’s work. She wrote two wonderful books, ‘The Princess Saves Herself in This One’ and ‘The Witch Doesn’t Burn in This One.’ You can feel your heart opening because she says things that you thought only you felt.
Deborah Harkness
28
I love being outdoors and being with animals, and when you’re on a horse, you have to leave your anxieties and worries behind in the barn. It’s very therapeutic.
Deborah Harkness
29
As a historian, you can only go as far as the evidence will take you.
Deborah Harkness
30
I became a teacher because I wanted to make a difference in people’s lives.
Deborah Harkness
31
There is a lot of talk in the academy about the death of the humanities. Based on my readers’ response and their interest in history and literature and art, the death of the humanities has been grossly overstated.
Deborah Harkness
32
I absolutely love Dorothy Dunnett’s ‘House of Niccolo’ series and the ‘Lymond Chronicles.’ They are so detailed.
Deborah Harkness
33
As a historian, I love every little detail, but whole long passages about wood paneling and journeys on horseback and every stop at every inn had to go out the window. I decided the history in the books should be like spice in a soup – a little went a long way. Like cilantro.
Deborah Harkness