Yann Martel

Yann Martel
Yann Martelis a Spanish-born Canadian author best known for the Man Booker Prize-winning novel Life of Pi, a #1 international bestseller published in more than 50 territories. It has sold more than 12 million copies worldwide and spent more than a year on the Bestseller Lists of the New York Times and The Globe and Mail, among many other bestseller lists. It was adapted to the screen and directed by Ang Lee, garnering four Oscarsincluding Best Director and won the...
NationalityCanadian
ProfessionNovelist
Date of Birth25 June 1963
CitySalamanca, Spain
CountryCanada
But I want to pray to Allah. I want to be a Christian.
Come aboard if your destination is oblivion- it should be our next stop. We can sit together. You can have the window seat if you want. But it's a sad view.
A house is a compressed territory where our basic needs can be fulfilled close by and safely.
...for everything has a trace of the divine in it.
If you went to a home, kicked down the front door, chased the people who lived there out into the street and said, Go! You are free! Free as a bird! Go! Go! - do you think they would shout and dance for joy? They wouldn't. Birds are not free. The people you've just evicted would sputter, With what right do you throw us out? This is our home. We own it. We have lived here for years. We're calling the police, you scoundrel.
What a terrible thing it is to botch a farewell.
Mockery be damned, my urine looked delicious.
Bapu Gandhi said, ‘All religions are true.’ I just want to love God.
The moral of a fable is eternal. The moral of a story is temporary to a story.
Every book I've written has been a different attempt to understand something, and the success or failure of the previous one is irrelevant. I write the book I want.
I like using animals because they help suspend my reader's disbelief. We have certain ideas about dentists. We don't have many ideas about rhinoceros dentists.
I'm looking at a dead event and trying to give it new life. In a sense, I'm a taxidermist.
I love Canada. It's a wonderful political act of faith that exists atop a breathtakingly beautiful land.
'Life of Pi' was actually a very simple novel to write.