Words matter. These are the best Jeffrey Archer Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I think my attitude to human beings has changed since leaving prison.
Whenever you analyse anyone who has had any success and they’re in the headlines, you will find they are human and make mistakes. I’m certainly that and I’ve made a lot of mistakes.
I am currently doing about 30 charity auctions a year.
I’m not involved in politics any more and they’re quite right.
When a book comes out I wonder if one person will buy it. It’s agony. Of course it’s stupid, but it’s agony.
At the end of my trial, I was rather hoping the judge would send me to Australia for the rest of my life.
I think when you’ve lost an election by 179, there’s going to be a period of time after eighteen years in government when you can’t do anything right, and people just kick you for the sake of it, will never admit they voted Conservative.
I learnt a lot about myself, I learnt a lot about other people and the problems they have. If I was lucky enough to live to a hundred, how I will feel about two per cent of my life being that way, I don’t know.
Well I think after leaving prison, and having written three diaries about life in prison, it became a sort of a new challenge to write another novel, to write a new novel.
But the thing I felt most strongly about, and put at the end of one of the prison diaries, was education.
I’ve been doing nineteen hours a day on London, nothing else, I mean this has been my whole life, and writing has been put on one side, and if I’m privileged enough to be the Mayor of this city, then I will not write again.
I’m not taking any interest in politics. I’m not involved in politics in any way. My life is in writing now.
The discipline required for athletics carried through to writing. You call it obsession. I call it discipline. By the way, I see nothing wrong with that.
I spent my first three weeks there on a wing with 21 murderers. I met some very evil people there but also some men who’d had no upbringing, no chance in life.
And I did wonder – because it’s now three years ago since I left prison – whether there would come a time when I would forget it, or it would be in the past as anything else might be – no, it’s there every day of my life.
I was allowed to ring the bell for five minutes until everyone was in assembly. It was the beginning of power.
Exclusive will not be published in book format.
When I was deputy chairman I could travel from Glasgow to Edinburgh without leaving Tory land. In a two-week period I covered every constituency in which we had an MP. There were 14. Now we have only one. We appear to have given up.
Chatterers are a menace.
I feel I have had a very interesting life, but I am rather hoping there is still more to come. I still haven’t captained the England cricket team, or sung at Carnegie Hall!
What I have found is that real friends stand by you.
Well I certainly have learned and I hope I’m moving on and certainly two years of prison was a terrible punishment.