Sheri Brocker > Sheri's Quotes

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  • #1
    Hieronymus Hawkes
    “People were funny. They thought having a drone hanging outside the window was too invasive, but a lifelog didn’t strike the same chord. The recording feature didn’t feel invasive.”
    Hieronymus Hawkes, Effacement

  • #2
    Jack Getze
    “Billy,” Emily said. “Billy Wallace is the father.” “Not that musician, the druggie who left school?”
    Jack Getze, Making Hearts

  • #3
    Mark M. Bello
    “And that damned man in the White House doesn’t help things any. He represents the type of political hatred I’m talking about. Guys like him play to the worst fears of white men. Are you having a bad time of it right now? Lost your job? Having difficulty making ends meet? It’s not my fault or your fault. It’s the black man’s fault. It’s the Muslims’ fault. Blame a Mexican immigrant. Man’s got everyone lining up, taking sides, white people versus people of color, different religions arguing their way is the right way. This is a bad time in America. It’s an especially terrible time for a black woman to be taking on a white cop or the white establishment.”
    Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

  • #4
    J.B. Lion
    “A spark is exactly what it means. An igniting of something that spreads, and soon it becomes difficult to contain. The sparks, in this case, represent sin, not just any sin, a major undertaking of evil that spreads and infects life, changing the way humans live forever." " The Everlasting protects man for six of these catastrophes, but once there is a seventh, well… anything goes."
    "I’m not destroying man; I’m saving man--from themselves.”
    J.B. Lion, The Seventh Spark: Volume One – Knights of the Trinity

  • #5
    M.R. Noble
    “she told me to be my own hero. Inside of all of us was the potential for greatness—all it took was a change in perspective. “You can burn brighter than they can, if you have too.”
    M. R. Noble, Karolina Dalca, Dark Eyes

  • #6
    Steve  Bates
    “We use time machines to learn from the past,” Chris continued. “But there are still a few things that have been puzzling some of us, and maybe you can help clear up one of them. There’s a person called Kim Kardashian—someone born in your time, I believe. She has had thousands of regeneration and cybernetic enhancement procedures. But no one can seem to recall her purpose. Does she have any special talent or reason for being kept alive all these centuries?”
    Heads shook in bafflement.
    “Anyway,” said Chris, “you’ll be glad to know that Tom Brady is still slinging footballs as far as ever. And Brett Favre is considering another comeback.”
    Steve Bates, Back To You

  • #7
    Behcet Kaya
    “The locals call me alligator man, not only because of my scar, but because I keep an alligator by the name of Emma on my boat. I caught her as a young ‘un back in Louisiana. She’s small and doesn’t take up much room. So far, I’ve had no complaints, although I have no illusions that at some point I will be forced to give her up. For now, what better watch dog could I have? No alarm system needed. I simply post my sign, ‘Beware of Alligator’ on the dock.”
    Behcet Kaya, Treacherous Estate

  • #8
    Diana   Forbes
    “I felt hot under my Mutton sleeves. "I just wish he'd have the decency to say whatever he came to say in front of his wife."
    "Perhaps his wife is busy today."
    "She shouldn't be." His wife should track him like a bloodhound.”
    Diana Forbes, Mistress Suffragette

  • #9
    Jalal ad-Din Muhammad ar-Rumi
    “أنتَ في القيمة أسمى من العَالَمَيْن كليهما
    فماذا يمكن أن أفعلَ إذا كنتَ لا تعرفُ قَدَرَك؟؟
    لا تبعْ نفسك رخيصاً،وأنتَ نفيسٌ جدا في عيني الحقّ”
    جلال الدين الرومي, فيه ما فيه

  • #10
    Wallace Stegner
    “Perceptions trained in another climate and another landscape have had to be modified. That means we have had to learn to quit depending on perceptual habit. Our first and hardest adaptation was to learn all over again how to see. Our second was to learn to like the new forms and colors and light and scale when we had learned to see them. Our third was to develop new techniques, a new palette, to communicate them. And our fourth, unfortunately out of of our control, was to train an audience that would respond to what we wrote or painted.”
    Wallace Stegner, Where the Bluebird Sings to the Lemonade Springs: Living and Writing in the West

  • #11
    Laura Ingalls Wilder
    “You can fill a glass full to the brim with milk, and fill another glass of the same size brim full of popcorn, and then you can put all the popcorn kernel by kernel into the milk, and the milk will not run over. You cannot do this with bread. Popcorn and milk are the only two things that will go into the same place.”
    Laura Ingalls Wilder, Farmer Boy

  • #12
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón
    “That's what happens when people reach old age; nobody remembers they've been bastards too.”
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón, The Prisoner of Heaven

  • #13
    Harold Bloom
    “All canonical writing possesses the quality "of making you feel strangeness at home.”
    Harold Bloom, The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages

  • #14
    Jostein Gaarder
    “Ladies and Gentlemen...we are floating in Space!”
    Jostein Gaarder, Sophie’s World

  • #15
    Agatha Christie
    “Liking is more important than loving. It lasts. I want what is between us to last, Luke. I don't want us just to love each other and marry and get tired of each other and then want to marry some one else."

    "Oh! my dear Love, I know. You want reality. So do I. What's between us will last for ever because it's founded on reality.”
    Agatha Christie, Murder Is Easy

  • #16
    Charlotte Brontë
    “It is as if I had a string somewhere under my left ribs, tightly and inextricably knotted to a similar string situated in the corresponding quarter of your little frame. And if that boisterous channel, and two hundred miles or so of land come broad between us, I am afraid that cord of communion will be snapt; and then I've a nervous notion I should take to bleeding inwardly.”
    Charlotte Brontë, Jane Eyre

  • #17
    Walter Isaacson
    “It's a complex song, and it's fascinating to watch the creative process as they went back and forth and finally created it over a few months. Lennon was always my favorite Beatle. [ He laughs as Lennon stops during the first take and makes the band go back and revise a chord.] Did you hear that little detour they took? It didn't work, so they went back and started from where they were. It's so raw in this version. It actually makes the sound like mere mortals. You could actually imagine other people doing this, up to this version. Maybe not writing and conceiving it, but certainly playing it. Yet they just didn't stop. They were such perfectionists they kept it going This made a big impression on me when I was in my thirties. You could just tell how much they worked at this.
    They did a bundle of work between each of these recording. They kept sending it back to make it closer to perfect.[ As he listens to the third take, he points out how instrumentation has gotten more complex.] The way we build stuff at Apple is often this way. Even the number of models we'd make of a new notebook or iPod. We would start off with a version and then begin refining and refining, doing detailed models of the design, or the buttons, or how a function operates. It's a lot of work, but in the end it just gets better, and soon it's like, " Wow, how did they do that?!? Where are the screws?”
    Walter Isaacson, Steve Jobs

  • #18
    Terry Pratchett
    “Books must be treated with respect, we feel that in our bones, because words have power. Bring enough words together they can bend space and time.”
    Terry Pratchett

  • #19
    Richard Wright
    “But he is product of a dislocated society; he is a dispossessed and disinherited man; he is all of this, and he lives amide the greatest plenty on earth and he is looking and feeling for a way out.”
    Richard Wright, Native Son

  • #20
    Madeline Miller
    “He was not so easy and even as he pretended. Living with him was like standing beside the sea. Each day a different color, a different foam-capped height, but always the same restless intensity pulling towards the horizon.”
    Madeline Miller, Circe

  • #21
    Robert M. Pirsig
    “The range of human knowledge today is so great that we're all specialists and the distance between specializations has become so great that anyone who seeks to wander freely between them almost has to forego closeness with the people around him.”
    Robert M. Pirsig

  • #22
    Charles Darwin
    “I fully agree with all that you say on the advantages of H. Spencer's excellent expression of 'the survival of the fittest.' This, however, had not occurred to me till reading your letter. It is, however, a great objection to this term that it cannot be used as a substantive governing a verb; and that this is a real objection I infer from H. Spencer continually using the words, natural selection.

    (Letter to A. R. Wallace July 1866)”
    Charles Darwin

  • #23
    Lawrence Hill
    “Sometimes a deal with the devil is better than no deal at all.”
    Lawrence Hill, Someone Knows My Name

  • #24
    Mark Z. Danielewski
    “No one ever really gets used to nightmares.”
    Mark Z. Danielewski, House of Leaves

  • #25
    Kate Chopin
    “a tangle of sea smell and of weeds and damp, new-plowed earth, mingled with the heavy perfumes of white blossoms somewhere near, but the night sat lightly upon the sea and the land. there was no weight of darkness, there were no shadows. the white light of the moon had fallen upon the world like the mystery and the softness of sleep.”
    kate chopin, The Awakening



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