“They're hardly given to conventional writers, and a writer like myself is hardly given a knighthood.”
Interview with Wilson Harris (2010) on being Knighted at Queen Elizabeth II Birthday Honours
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Wilson Harris 15
Guyanese writer 1921–2018Related quotes

“I was hardly fit for human society. Thus destiny shaped me to be a science fiction writer.”
The Twinkling of an Eye: My Life as an Englishman (1998) Unsourced variant: "Why had I become a writer in the first place? Because I wasn't fit for society; I didn't fit into the system."

"Quotes", The Educated Imagination (1963), Talk 2: The Singing School

National Observer (6 February 1967)
"Inner Landscape : Interview with J.G. Ballard" by Robert Lightfoot and David Pendleton, in Friends No. 17 (30 October 1970) http://www.jgballard.ca/media/1970_oct_friends_magazine.html; also quoted in The Columbia Dictionary of Quotations (1993) by Robert Andrews
Context: A hundred years ago one has the impression that people had made a clear distinction between the outer world of work and of agriculture, commerce and social relationships — which was real — and the inner world of their own minds, day-dreams and hopes. Fiction on the one hand; reality on the other. This reality which surrounded individuals, the writer's role of inventing a fiction that encapsulated various experiences going on in the real world and dramatising them in fictional form, worked. Now the whole situation has been reversed. The exterior landscapes of the seventies are almost entirely fictional ones created by advertising, mass merchandising… politics conducted as advertising. It is very difficult for the writer.
Given that external reality is a fiction, the writer's role is almost superfluous. He does not need to invent the fiction because it is already there.

As quoted in The New York Times Book Review (7 November 1954)

from "Elegy for Wonderland", by Ben Hecht, Esquire Magazine, March 1959

Letter to the Editor, Dublin Daily Express (27 February 1895)