“My father believed a real man didn’t read, and my parents hoped I’d get some sense and find a job in insurance.”
“Because I’ve been so bad at looking after myself, how would I ever look after a kid? But the old cliche applied: they handed her to me, and my world turned upside down – and I realised I was now going to be vulnerable in more ways than I expected.”
“My own life has had so many twists that I keep thinking I’ll have one blessing that is not in disguise.”
“Whenever dark things happen in my life, there is always some dark humour.”
“The only book in our home was the Bible. My parents forbade books. They thought I needed help because I wanted to be a writer!”
“The tourist board have put a bounty on me head, but they like the biz from tourists.”
“I’d kill to be a poet.”
“I always had this notion of a noir novel in Galway. The city is exploding, emigration has reversed, and we are fast becoming a cosmopolitan city.”
“I committed a cardinal sin as a kid. I never spoke, and my mother thought there was something seriously wrong with me. A silent child is regarded as a problem in Ireland, and I just read all the time.”
“I was a failed actor, but for 25 years, I got to go on stage anyway, and I loved it. I’ve still got the day job, and the travel bug.”
“I decided to write books, just to prove to myself that I was still alive, if nothing else.”
“I had wanted to write English crime novels based on the American hard-boiled style, and for the first two novels about Brixton, the critics didn’t actually know I was Irish.”
“We haven’t had crime writers, and for a long time in the Republic, we didn’t seem to have a crime problem as such.”
“Crime fiction is the new rock n’ roll.”
“After five awful movies, I admitted failure and said I was not cut out to be an actor. But how many people get a chance to live their dream?”
“Jack Taylor was a private investigator in Galway, which seemed like madness. I used lots of Galway-isms, which seemed like madness, too.”
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