Nineteen Seventy-Four Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Nineteen Seventy-Four (Red Riding, #1) Nineteen Seventy-Four by David Peace
6,201 ratings, 3.61 average rating, 590 reviews
Open Preview
Nineteen Seventy-Four Quotes Showing 1-21 of 21
“My father used to say, 'If you want to know the artist, look at the art'.
He was usually talking about Stanley Matthews or Don Bradman when he said it.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“Leeds United had won but I didn’t care. I had lost.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“It was raining so hard now that the whole city looked underwater. I wished to Christ it was, that the rain would drown the people and wash the place the fuck away.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“The future, like the past, is written. It cannot be changed, but it can help to heal the wounds of the present.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“I sat down on the arm of my father's empty chair, thinking of sea-view flats in Brighton, of southern girls called Anna or Sophie, and of a misplaced sense of filial duty now half redundant.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“I was miles and years away and then suddenly aware my hour was at hand, feeling all their eyes on me.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“Uncle Eric holding court, proud the only time he ever left Yorkshire was to kill Germans.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“Reckless talk costs lives.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“I wanted to sleep for a thousand years, to wake up when them and their like were gone, when I didn’t have their dirty black ink on my fingers, in my blood.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“Back in my muddy clothes at the door of my room, swallowing pills and lighting cigarettes, wanting to sleep but not wanting to dream, thinking this’ll be the day that I die, pictures of Paula waving bye bye.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“I lit my last cigarette and said my little prayers.
Clare, here’s one for you.
Susan, here’s one for you.
Jeanette, here’s one for you.
Paula, they’re all for you.
And the unborn.
I sat there, singing along to The Little Drummer Boy, with those far off days, those days of grace, coming down.
Waiting for the blue lights.
Ninety miles an hour.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“I prayed for my mother and sister, for my uncles and aunts, for the friends I’d had, both good and bad, and last for my father wherever he was, Amen.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“I pulled myself up on my elbows and lay on my belly staring down into hell. There below me in the basin of Hunslet Carr, just 500 yards beneath me, was my England on the morning of Sunday 15 December in the year of Our Lord 1974, looking a thousand years younger and none the better.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“For the first time my prayers were not for me but for everyone else, that the dead were alive and the lost were found, and that all those lives could be lived anew.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“For the first time my prayers were not for me but for everyone else, that all of those things in my notebooks, on all of those tapes, in all of those envelopes and bags in my room, that none of them were true, that the dead were alive and the lost were found, and that all of those lives could be lived anew.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“If a man comes up to you in the street and asks you for an address, is he lost or is he interrogating you?”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“Devil triumphs when good men do nowt”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“Never had the urge to deliver us from evil?”
“No, never”
“Devil triumphs when good men do nowt”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“Back at the house, first things first.
Phone the office.
Nothing.
No news being bad news for the Kemplays and Clare, good news for me.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“The Byline Boy at last, brining more death to the house of the dead.”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four
“lab. Develops”
David Peace, Nineteen Seventy Four