The Essential Clive Barker Quotes
The Essential Clive Barker: Selected Fiction
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Clive Barker662 ratings, 4.14 average rating, 17 reviews
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The Essential Clive Barker Quotes
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“And when you’re very lucky, a third state comes your way: what I’ll call the ecstatic. It doesn’t happen very often, at least to me, and when it does it never lasts very long, but when it’s gone you know it. What is this state? Damned if I know. I do know that it invariably comes when you least expect it. Suddenly you’re expressing feelings you didn’t know you had, you’re seeing patterns you didn’t know were there to be found, and better still, you find you have the words to express those feelings, those patterns. When it’s over, you come down from the experience feeling tender and vulnerable. But what has happened on the page is somehow new to you, as though another mind has created it. More than once I’ve been tempted to reject or even destroy work I made in this state, motivated by an unhealthy desire to recall the text within the boundaries of what’s recognizably mine.”
― The Essential Clive Barker: A Dark Fantasy and Horror Compendium Where Imagination and Terror Collide
― The Essential Clive Barker: A Dark Fantasy and Horror Compendium Where Imagination and Terror Collide
“Once the work is up and under way, once the world is breathing, you have to surrender to it: to its rhythms, to its intentions, to its ugliness, sometimes; to its beauty, others. Sometimes this surrender, which is the second state of creation, feels perilous. You float in a murky place for long periods, waiting for the sense of things to show itself. Doubt devours you. This time, you think, there’s nothing there to bear you up. You’re just going to sink, while these illusions you created watch you go down. And then, miraculously, something begins to happen. The story begins to move before you, like a pageant. Still surrendering, you describe it. If you’re lucky, there are days when this other world is so familiar to you that you can operate in that journalistic fashion I described before and simply report what you see. Some days too when you have to wait, not pushing too hard, not demanding that the sense of all this show itself before it wants to; listening, deeply; watching, deeply.”
― The Essential Clive Barker: A Dark Fantasy and Horror Compendium Where Imagination and Terror Collide
― The Essential Clive Barker: A Dark Fantasy and Horror Compendium Where Imagination and Terror Collide
“way, is music. I hear that longing in countless pieces: in Barber’s Adagio, in the “In Paradisum” from the Fauré Requiem, in the “Liebestod” from Tristan and Isolde; in Max Steiner’s film scores, in folk songs like “Blow the Wind Southerly” and “Shenandoah”
― The Essential Clive Barker: A Dark Fantasy and Horror Compendium Where Imagination and Terror Collide
― The Essential Clive Barker: A Dark Fantasy and Horror Compendium Where Imagination and Terror Collide
“I wonder if the reverse is not also in some way true. That the artist is constantly working on an elaborate and fantasticated self-portrait, but at the end has drawn, unbeknown, a picture of the world.”
― The Essential Clive Barker: A Dark Fantasy and Horror Compendium Where Imagination and Terror Collide
― The Essential Clive Barker: A Dark Fantasy and Horror Compendium Where Imagination and Terror Collide
“Here let me be quite clear: the primary impulse behind such creations is not escapism. That implies a kind of cowardice in the face of the world, which is not what inspires such visions. Quite the reverse. It is a hunger to see more clearly that fuels the true fantasist. A desire to express the world’s transforming heart.”
― The Essential Clive Barker: A Dark Fantasy and Horror Compendium Where Imagination and Terror Collide
― The Essential Clive Barker: A Dark Fantasy and Horror Compendium Where Imagination and Terror Collide
