Karma Dargis > Karma's Quotes

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  • #1
    Darin C.  Brown
    “There are forces in the world much stronger than death. The special relationship you two have is assuredly one such entity. If you ever despair, remember this: he is with you. He will always be with you.” –Reverend Sanderson”
    Darin C. Brown, The Taste of Despair

  • #2
    Kathleen Lopez
    “Her firm belief was that things would be better in society if there was a periodic ‘social cleansing’ to eliminate those influences that are considered unsavory. She sounds like she’d be fun at parties,” the officer joked.”
    Kathleen Lopez, Thirteen for Dinner

  • #3
    Virgil
    “Yo temo al Griego, aunque presente dones.”
    Virgil, La Eneida

  • #4
    Lemony Snicket
    “A library is like an island in the middle of a vast sea of ignorance, particularly if the library is very tall and the surrounding area has been flooded.”
    Lemony Snicket, Horseradish: Bitter Truths You Can't Avoid

  • #5
    Gregory David Roberts
    “At first, when we truly love someone, our greatest fear is that the loved one will stop loving us. What we should fear and dread, of course, is that we won’t stop loving them, even after they’re dead and gone. For I still love you with the whole of my heart, Prabaker. I still love you. And sometimes, my friend, the love that I have, and can’t give to you, crushes the breath from my chest. Sometimes, even now, my heart is drowning in a sorrow that has no stars without you, and no laughter, and no sleep.”
    Gregory David Roberts, Shantaram

  • #6
    Esther Forbes
    “After that Johnny began to watch himself. For the first time he learned to think before he spoke.”
    Esther Forbes, Johnny Tremain

  • #7
    Malcolm X
    “أؤمن أن على المرء أن يعيش حياته بالطول والعرض ، وليكن موته عنيفًا”
    Malcolm X

  • #8
    K.  Ritz
    “Gossip is like thread wound over a spindle of truth, changing its shape.”
    K. Ritz, Sheever's Journal, Diary of a Poison Master

  • #9
    “Before she knew it, Remy found herself daydreaming about Logan holding her tight against his lean, muscular body.”
    Hope Worthington, Shifting Moon: Shifting Moon Saga, Book 1

  • #10
    Kenneth Schmitt
    “The subject of quantum physics is identifying the smallest parts of an entity and understanding its nature and its part in the whole of existence. In every case we come to the understanding that there is no objective world that we perceive, except for the conceptions inside of our minds. We are all collectively dreaming together the empirical realm. We collectively hold the fundamental energies in the frequencies of the electromagnetic wave patterns that we perceive. The quality of our experience is created in our consciousness.”
    Kenneth Schmitt, Quantum Energetics and Spirituality Volume 1: Aligning with Universal Consciousness

  • #11
    Sara Pascoe
    “The summer sun bowing out threw slashes of colour between the buildings. London looked big, empty, and lonely. She stood in the doorway, like a cat trying to make up its mind.”
    Sara Pascoe, Being a Witch, and Other Things I Didn't Ask For

  • #12
    Merlin Franco
    “To you, the beautiful human in you, who, like everybody else on this planet, is on an everyday struggle to love and be loved. I hope you find the love, happiness, and enlightenment you have been looking for, in you, in your backyard, in your wretched little neighborhood.”
    Merlin Franco, Saint Richard Parker

  • #13
    Rebecca Rosenberg
    “What does one do when judged a laughingstock by the one person who matters most?”
    Rebecca Rosenberg, Madame Pommery, Creator of Brut Champagne

  • #14
    A.R. Merrydew
    “This book is dedicated to those in life whom I have met and by virtue of those encounters, have helped to shape the content herein.”
    A.R. Merrydew, From The Pen Of An Aquarian: Love, hope and darker moments

  • #15
    Lynne Truss
    “As with other paired bracketing devices (such as parentheses, dashes and quotation marks), there is actual mental cruelty involved , incidentally, in opening up a pair of commas and then neglecting to deliver the closing one. The reader hears the first shoe drop and then strains in agony to hear the second. In dramatic terms, it's like putting a gun on the mantelpiece in Act I and then having the heroine drown herself quietly offstage in the bath during the interval. It's just not cricket.”
    Lynne Truss, Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation

  • #16
    William Faulkner
    “I notice how it takes a lazy man, a man that hates moving, to get set on moving once he does get started off, the same as when he was set on staying still, like it aint the moving he hates so much as the starting and the stopping. And like he would be kind of proud of whatever come up to make the moving or the setting still look hard. He set there on the wagon hunched up, blinking, listening to us tell about how quick the bridge went and how high the water was, and I be durn if he didn't act like he was proud of it, like he had made the river rise himself.”
    William Faulkner, As I Lay Dying

  • #17
    Janet Fitch
    “The decor bowled me over. Everywhere I looked, there was something more to see. Botanical prints, a cross section of pomegranates, a passionflower vine and its fruit. Stacks of thick books on art and design and a collection of glass paperweights filled the coffee table. It was enormously beautiful, a sensibility I'd never encountered anywhere, a relaxed luxury. I could feel my mother's contemptuous gaze falling on the cluttered surfaces, but I was tired of three white flowers in a glass vase. There was more to life than that.”
    Janet Fitch, White Oleander

  • #18
    Nick Hornby
    “The Marie bit is easy enough to understand, then. The Laura thing takes a bit more explaining, but what it is, I think, is this: sentimental music has this great way of taking you back somewhere at the same time that it takes you forward, so you feel nostalgic and hopeful all at the same time. Marie’s the hopeful, forward part of it – maybe not her, necessarily, but somebody like her, somebody who can turn things around for me. (Exactly that: I always think that women are going to save me, lead me through to a better life, that they can change and redeem me.) And Laura’s the backward part, the last person I loved, and when I hear those sweet, sticky acoustic guitar chords I reinvent our time together, and, before I know it, we’re in the car trying to sing the harmonies on “Sloop John B” and getting it wrong and laughing. We never did that in real life. We never sang in the car, and we certainly never laughed when we got something wrong. This is why I shouldn’t be listening to pop music at the moment.”
    Nick Hornby, High Fidelity

  • #19
    Emily Dickinson
    “Faith—is the Pierless Bridge
    Supporting what We see
    Unto the Scene that We do not—
    Too slender for the eye
    It bears the Soul as bold
    As it were rocked in Steel
    With Arms of Steel at either side—
    It joins—behind the Veil
    To what, could We presume
    The Bridge would cease to be
    To Our far, vacillating Feet
    A first Necessity.”
    Emily Dickinson
    tags: faith



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