121 Quotes by John Burnside

  • Author John Burnside
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    The son of a Fife mining town sledder of coal-bings, bottle-forager, and picture-house troglodyte, I was decidedly urban and knew little about native fauna, other than the handful of birds I saw on trips to the beach or Sunday walks.

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  • Author John Burnside
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    Sometimes, though only in my most unguarded moments, I can still think of Annette Winters as my first love. At fifteen, she was tall, slender, very dark: an intelligent, sly girl possessed of what I think of now, though I didn't think of then, as a kind of debatable beauty.

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  • Author John Burnside
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    Our ancestors went to the woods to find fuel; they set snares there for birds and gathered nuts and fungi.

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  • Author John Burnside
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    A forest - the word dates back to the Norman occupancy, when it meant an area set aside for England's violent new masters to hunt boar and deer - is necessarily larger than a wood. It belonged to the king and was a fit place for his recreation.

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  • Author John Burnside
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    One day I was talking about what I was going to do next, and just found myself announcing it: 'I'm going to write a book about my father.'

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  • Author John Burnside
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    As a child, I read a great many books in which animals and birds played significant roles, not only in the narrative itself, but also in creating the emotional and psychological atmosphere of that narrative - the imaginative furniture, as it were, in which any story unfolds.

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  • Author John Burnside
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    For a boy of ten, used to the coal bings and rust-coloured burns of Cowdenbeath, the fields and woodland of Kingswood, with its overgrown but stately avenue of copper-barked sequoias, felt like a local version of paradise.

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