Brigitte > Brigitte's Quotes

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  • #1
    Libba Bray
    “There are no safe choices. Only other choices.”
    Libba Bray, A Great and Terrible Beauty

  • #2
    Libba Bray
    “My cholera's acting up again.”
    Libba Bray, A Great and Terrible Beauty

  • #3
    Dave Barry
    “If Black Stache laughed, you laughed. If he snarled, you snarled. If he breathed in your direction, you ran for cover.”
    Dave Barry, Peter and the Starcatchers

  • #4
    Dave Barry
    “Nobody understands how hard it is, being a captain.”
    Dave Barry, Peter and the Starcatchers

  • #5
    Anthony Doerr
    “we are all beautiful even as we are all part of the problem, and that to be a part of the problem is to be human”
    Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land

  • #6
    Anthony Doerr
    “what's so beautiful about a fool is that a fool never knows when to give up”
    Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land

  • #7
    Anthony Doerr
    “And as he looked, turning the leaf over and back, Aethon saw that the cities on both sides of the page, the dark ones and the bright ones, were one and the same, that there is no peace without war, no life without death, and he was afraid.”
    Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land

  • #8
    Anthony Doerr
    “Some stories," she says, "can be both false and true at the same time.”
    Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land

  • #9
    Anthony Doerr
    “Movies make you think civilization will end fast, like with aliens and explosions, but really it'll end slow. Ours is already ending, it's just ending too slow for people to notice.”
    Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land

  • #10
    Anthony Doerr
    “Time: the most violent war engine of all.”
    Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land

  • #11
    Anthony Doerr
    “A library, no mater how humble or grand, is a series of sacred gateways. You pass through them and leave your own city behind; you journey through time and space; and for a little while, you escape the confines of your own circumstances. Each of us who are readers gets to live through a multiplicity of eras; we get to tiptoe through, to borrow Jorge Luis Borge’s phrase, ‘a growing, dizzying net of divergent, convergent, and parallel times.”
    Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land

  • #12
    Anthony Doerr
    “By age seventeen he [Seymoure Sthulman]'d convinced himself that every human being he saw was a parasite, captive to the dictates of consumption. But as he reconstructs Zeno's translation, he realizes that the truth is infinitely more complicated, that we all are beautiful even as we are all part of the problem, and that to be a part of the problem is to be human.”
    Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land

  • #13
    John Green
    “hope is the correct response to the strange, often terrifying miracle of consciousness. Hope is not easy or cheap. It is true.”
    John Green, The Anthropocene Reviewed: Essays on a Human-Centered Planet

  • #14
    John Green
    “I...took some pride in 'not fulfilling my potential,' in part because I was terrified that if I tried my hardest, the world would learn I didn't actually have that much potential.”
    John Green, The Anthropocene Reviewed: Essays on a Human-Centered Planet

  • #15
    John Green
    “our obsessive desire to make and have and do and say and go and get—six of the seven most common verbs in English—may ultimately steal away our ability to be, the most common verb in English.”
    John Green, The Anthropocene Reviewed: Essays on a Human-Centered Planet

  • #16
    John Green
    “When you have the microphone, what you say matters, even when you're just kidding.”
    John Green, The Anthropocene Reviewed: Essays on a Human-Centered Planet

  • #17
    John Green
    “I am thoughtful—full of thoughts, all the time, inescapably, exhaustingly. But I am also mindless—acting in accordance with default settings I neither understand nor examine.”
    John Green, The Anthropocene Reviewed

  • #18
    John Green
    “You can't see the future coming--not the terrors, for sure, but you also can't see the wonders that are coming, the moments of light-soaked joy that await each of us.”
    John Green, The Anthropocene Reviewed: Essays on a Human-Centered Planet

  • #19
    Matt Haig
    “We only need to be one person.
    We only need to feel one existence.
    We don't have to do everything in order to be everything, because we are already infinite. While we are alive we always contain a future of multifarious possibility.”
    Matt Haig, The Midnight Library

  • #20
    Matt Haig
    “You don’t have to understand life. You just have to live it.”
    Matt Haig, The Midnight Library

  • #21
    Matt Haig
    “And that sadness is intrinsically part of the fabric of happiness. You can’t have one without the other. Of course, they come in different degrees and quantities. But there is no life where you can be in a state of sheer happiness for ever. And imagining there is just breeds more unhappiness in the life you’re in.”
    Matt Haig, The Midnight Library

  • #22
    Matt Haig
    “Of course, we can't visit every place or meet every person or do every job, yet most of what we'd feel in any life is still available. We don't have to play every game to know what winning feels like. We don't have to hear every piece of music in the world to understand music. We don't have to have tried every variety of grape from every vineyard to know the pleasure of wine. Love and laughter and fear and pain are universal currencies. We just have to close our eyes and savour the taste of the drink in front of us and listen to the song as it plays. We are as completely and utterly alive as we are in any other life and have access to the same emotional spectrum.”
    Matt Haig, The Midnight Library

  • #23
    Matt Haig
    “The paradox of volcanoes was that they were symbols of destruction but also life. Once the lava slows and cools, it solidifies and then breaks down over time to become soil - rich, fertile soil.
    She wasn't a black hole, she decided. She was a volcano. And like a volcano she couldn't run away from herself. She'd have to stay there and tend to that wasteland.
    She could plant a forest inside herself.”
    Matt Haig, The Midnight Library

  • #24
    Matt Haig
    “Want,’ she told her, in a measured tone, ‘is an interesting word. It means lack. Sometimes if we fill that lack with something else the original want disappears entirely.”
    Matt Haig, The Midnight Library

  • #25
    Matt Haig
    “It is quite a revelation to discover that the place you wanted to escape to is the exact same place you escaped from. That the prison wasn't the place, but the perspective.”
    Matt Haig, The Midnight Library

  • #26
    Matt Haig
    “The thing that looks the most ordinary might end up being the thing that leads you to victory.”
    Matt Haig, The Midnight Library

  • #27
    Matt Haig
    “Maybe that's what all lives were, though. Maybe even the most seemingly perfectly intense or worthwhile lives ultimately felt the same. Acres of disappointment and monotony and hurts and rivalries but with flashes of wonder and beauty. Maybe that was the only meaning that mattered. To be the world, witnessing itself.”
    Matt Haig, The Midnight Library
    tags: life

  • #28
    Matt Haig
    “Nora had always had a problem accepting herself. From as far back as she could remember, she'd had the sense that she wasn't enough. Her parents who both had their own insecurities, had encouraged that idea.
    She imagined, now, what it would be like to accept herself completely. Every mistake she had ever made. Every mark on her body. Every dream she had ever made. Every mark on her body. Every dream she hadn't reached or pain she had felt. Every lust or longing she had suppressed.
    She imagined accepting it all. The way she accepted nature. The way she accepted a glacier or a puffin or the breach of a whale.
    She imagined seeing herself as just another brilliant freak of nature. Just another sentient animal, trying her best.
    And in doing so, she imagined what it was like to be free.”
    Matt Haig, The Midnight Library

  • #29
    Robin Wall Kimmerer
    “Even a wounded world is feeding us. Even a wounded world holds us, giving us moments of wonder and joy. I choose joy over despair. Not because I have my head in the sand, but because joy is what the earth gives me daily and I must return the gift.”
    Robin Wall Kimmerer, Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants

  • #30
    Robin Wall Kimmerer
    “Paying attention is a form of reciprocity with the living world, receiving the gifts with open eyes and open heart.”
    Robin Wall Kimmerer, Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants



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