Mike McCormack
Irish novelist and writer
Mike McCormack (born 1965) is an Irish novelist and short story writer.
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Quotes
edit- You always think that if you're going to spend seven years on a book, it should be Gravity's Rainbow or Ulysses or something, but mine is just a 200-page book that took a long time.
- McKeon, Belinda. Metaphysics gets a Mayo accent, The Irish Times (13 May 2005)
- This is going to sound really childish, but I've been intrigued by Romania ever since the 1976 Olympics, when Nadia Comăneci, the little gymnast, scored a perfect 10. And I thought any country that gave that to the world had to be wonderful, so I read up a lot on it. When the 1989 revolutions broke out, I remember cheering them on. They were the last ones to make a bid for freedom, and it was the bloodiest and the most spectacular of the revolutions. It was almost French in its drama, like the French Revolution.
- McKeon, Belinda. Metaphysics gets a Mayo accent, The Irish Times (13 May 2005)
- I nearly went fucking crazy crazy. Notes [from a Coma] marked a sort of natural breakdown with Jonathan Cape. The book got a good critical response but it didn't too well. So publishers look at you then and think, okay, he writes good books but . . . If you have that experimental twist, you make things hard for yourself. So for those five years, I couldn't give my work away. It was tough on me and for people around me. But as my wife Maeve said to me, it isn't my job to get published . . . it is my job to write.
- Taking risks, challenging publishers, and earning readers, The Irish Times (10 April 2013)