(?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)
Alan Hollinghurst

“She felt something similar, but worse in a way, about hundreds and hundreds of books she’d read, novels, biographies, occasional books, about music and art—she could remember nothing about them at all, so that it seemed rather pointless even to say that she had read them; such claims were things people set great store by but she hardly supposed they recalled any more than she did. Sometimes a book persisted as a coloured shadow at the edge of sight, as vague and unrecapturable as something seen in the rain from a passing vehicle; looked at directly it vanished altogether. Sometimes there were atmospheres, even the rudiments of a scene; a man in an office looking over Regent’s Park, rain in the street outside—a little blurred etching of a situation she would never, could never, trace back to its source in a novel she had read some time, she thought, in the past thirty years.”

Alan Hollinghurst, The Stranger's Child
Read more quotes from Alan Hollinghurst


Share this quote:
Share on Twitter

Friends Who Liked This Quote

To see what your friends thought of this quote, please sign up!


This Quote Is From

The Stranger's Child The Stranger's Child by Alan Hollinghurst
11,865 ratings, average rating, 1,543 reviews
Open Preview

Browse By Tag