Sha > Sha's Quotes

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  • #1
    “Haven’t you ever done something you regretted when you woke up the next morning?” Steven asked.
    I didn’t want to tell him how many times.”
    M S M Barkawitz, Feeling Lucky

  • #2
    Behcet Kaya
    “Ludicrous? Seems like wherever you go, trouble follows you.”
    “Look, Deputy Lawson. I had nothing to do with all this. I was just have a beer and minding my own business until this woman sat down next to me and said, ‘Can you help me, Mr. Ludef…’ She didn’t even finish the sentence. The next thing I know she’s laying on the deck. I don’t know who she is or why she sought me out.”
    “Seems like I’ve heard this story before. You have a nasty reputation of people dying around you.”
    “You know better. That comes with the occupation.”
    “And you know the drill. Don’t leave town until we get to the bottom of this.”
    Behcet Kaya, Treacherous Estate

  • #3
    Randy Loubier
    “God knows far more about living a life of joy and blessings than we do.”
    Randy Loubier, Slow Brewing Tea

  • #4
    Gabriel F.W. Koch
    “A look of absolute terror locked onto her features.”
    Gabriel F.W. Koch, Death Leaves a Shadow

  • #5
    Anne  Michaud
    “By all appearances, Hillary made a deal with herself over Bill’s philandering. She’s a private person who hates campaigning, so her marriage to a charismatic “people person” in Bill created a dynamic partnership.”
    Anne Michaud, Why They Stay: Sex Scandals, Deals, and Hidden Agendas of Nine Political Wives

  • #6
    Malcolm Gladwell
    “Hard work is a prison sentence only if it does not have meaning.”
    Malcolm Gladwell

  • #7
    Emem Uko
    “It's the journey that matters, soak it in. Learn lessons out of it. Impact positively so that if you never get to your destination, at least you'd leave a legacy to be remembered.”
    Emem Uko

  • #8
    Colleen McCullough
    “Gazala,”
    Colleen McCullough, The Thorn Birds

  • #9
    Joseph Campbell
    “We have only to follow the thread of the hero path.
    And where we had thought to find an abomonation,
    we shall find a God.
    And where we had thought to slay another,
    we shall slay ourselves.
    And where we had thought to travel outward,
    we shall come to the center of our own existence.
    And where we had thought to be alone,
    we shall be with all the world.”
    Joseph Campbell

  • #10
    M.L. Stedman
    “When he wakes sometimes from dark dreams of broken cradles, and compasses without bearings, he pushes the unease down, lets the daylight contradict it. And isolation lulls him with the music of the lie.”
    M.L. Stedman, The Light Between Oceans

  • #11
    George R.R. Martin
    “Will you make a song for him?' the woman asked.
    'He has a song,' the man replied. 'He is the prince that was promised, and his is the song of ice and fire.”
    George R.R. Martin, A Clash of Kings

  • #12
    “Around the outside of the room other beautiful women wearing little or nothing at all flitted between the infatuated, intoxicated men, sometimes luring them away for a private dance. The men would follow obediently, weighed down by lust and credit cards.”
    R.D. Ronald, The Zombie Room

  • #13
    Azar Nafisi
    “None of us can avoid being contaminated by the world's evils; it's all a matter of what attitude you take towards them.”
    Azar Nafisi, Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books

  • #14
    Peter Benchley
    “He felt at once betrayed and betrayer, deceived and deceiver. He was a criminal forced into crime, an unwilling whore.”
    Peter Benchley, Jaws

  • #15
    Salman Rushdie
    “Ignorantly is how we all fall in love; for it is a kind of fall. Closing our eyes, we leap from that cliff in hope of a soft landing. Nor is it always soft; but still, without that leap nobody comes to life.”
    Salman Rushdie, The Moor's Last Sigh

  • #16
    Junot Díaz
    “That was the summer when everything we would become was hovering just over our heads.”
    Junot Díaz, This Is How You Lose Her

  • #17
    Jack Kerouac
    “Then I suddenly had the most tremendous feeling of the pitifulness of human beings, whatever they were, their faces, pained mouths, personalities, attempts to be gay, little petulances, feelings of loss, their dull and empty witticisms so soon forgotten: Ah, for what? I knew that the sound of silence was everywhere and therefore everything everywhere was silence. Suppose we suddenly wake up and see that what we thought to be this and that, ain't this and that at all? I staggered up the hill, greeted by birds, and looked at all the huddled sleeping figures on the floor. Who were all these strange ghosts rooted to the silly little adventure of earth with me? And who was I?”
    Jack Kerouac, The Dharma Bums
    tags: irie

  • #18
    Mark Bowden
    “Over four months in December 2008 and January, February, and March 2009, as Conficker assembled the largest botnet in the world, government, which would seem to have had the largest share of overarching responsibility, played a shockingly minor role. At first the übergeeks assumed the feds were constrained by the need for secrecy: you know, protecting official tactics and methods. Surely behind the scenes there was a sophisticated, well-funded clandestine official apparatus—everyone has seen the gleaming, dark glass and metal, see-everything/hear-everything sets Hollywood dusts off for its espionage blockbusters. What the anti-Conficker group discovered was deeply disillusioning. The real reason for the feds’ silence was . . . they had nothing to offer! They were in way over their heads.”
    Mark Bowden, Worm: The First Digital World War

  • #19
    Viktor E. Frankl
    “A human being is not one thing among others; things determine each other, but man is ultimately self-determining. What he becomes - within the limits of endowment and environment- he has made out of himself. In the concentration camps, for example, in this living laboratory and on this testing ground, we watched and witnessed some of our comrades behave like swine while others behaved like saints. Man has both potentialities within himself; which one is actualized depends on decisions but not on conditions.”
    Viktor E. Frankl, Man's Search for Meaning

  • #20
    L.M. Montgomery
    “Proverbs are all very fine when there's nothing to worry you, but when you're in real trouble, they're not a bit of help.”
    L.M. Montgomery, The Story Girl

  • #21
    Thomas  Harris
    “What does he do, Clarice? What is the first and principal thing he does, what need does he serve by killing? He covets. How do we begin to covet? We begin by coveting what we see every day.”
    Thomas Harris, The Silence of the Lambs

  • #22
    Ursula Hegi
    “And what she wanted more than anything that moment was for all the differences between people to matter no more - differences in size and race and belief....”
    Ursula Hegi, Stones from the River

  • #23
    Leon Uris
    “Until a man is struck in his own face he does not want to believe the attack on his brother concerns him.”
    Leon Uris

  • #24
    Stephanie Perkins
    “Once upon a time, there was a girl who talked to the moon. And she was mysterious and she was perfect, in that way that girls who talk to moons are. In the house next door, there lived a boy. And the boy watched the girl grow more and more perfect, more and more beautiful with each passing year. He watched her watch the moon. And he began to wonder if the moon would help him unravel the mystery of the beautiful girl. So the boy looked into the sky. But he couldn't concentrate on the moon. He was too distracted by the stars. And it didn't matter how many songs or poems had already been written about them, because whenever he thought about the girl, the stars shone brighter. As if she were the one keeping them illuminated.

    One day, the boy had to move away. He couldn't bring the girl with him, so he brought the stars. When he'd look out his window at night, he would start with one. One star. And the boy would make a wish on it, and the wish would be her name.

    At the sound of her name, a second star would appear. And then he'd wish her name again, and the stars would double into four. And four became eight, and eight became sixteen, and so on, in the greatest mathematical equation the universe had ever seen. And by the time an hour had passed, the sky would be filled with so many stars that it would wake the neighbors. People wondered who'd turned on the floodlights.

    The boy did. By thinking about the girl.”
    Stephanie Perkins, Lola and the Boy Next Door

  • #25
    Frederick Douglass
    “What to the Slave is the 4th of July?”
    Frederick Douglass

  • #26
    Ammar Habib
    “Let the generations know that women in uniform also guaranteed their freedom.”
    Ammar Habib, Mary Edwards Walker: America's Only Female Medal of Honor Recipient

  • #27
    William L. Shirer
    “I once took over a State which was faced by complete ruin, thanks to its trust in the promises of the rest of the world and to the bad regime of democratic governments… I have conquered chaos in Germany, re-established order and enormously increased production… developed traffic, caused mighty roads to be built and canals to be dug, called into being gigantic new factories and at the same time endeavored to further the education and culture of our people. I”
    William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany

  • #28
    Walter Farley
    “skeptical,”
    Walter Farley, The Black Stallion

  • #29
    Pat Conroy
    “Loss invites reflection and reformulating and a change of strategies. Loss hurts and bleeds and aches. Loss is always ready to call out your name in the night. Loss follows you home and taunts you at the breakfast table, follows you to work in the morning. You have to make accommodations and broker deals to soften the rabbit punches that loss brings to your daily life. You have to take the word "loser" and add it to your resume and walk around with it on your name tag as it hand-feeds you your own shit in dosages too large for even great beasts to swallow. The word "loser" follows you, bird-dogs you, sniffs you out of whatever fields you hide in because you have to face things clearly and you cannot turn away from what is true.”
    Pat Conroy, My Losing Season: A Memoir

  • #30
    Dennis K.  Hausker
    “Wait, Korban, are you vexed?"
    "That woman, she confounds, and insults me."
    "Women can perplex as easily as changing a cloak."
    "The princess is delicate, not like our women."
    "Yes, she is very delicate, pretty like a sweet flower."
    "Well, I care not for her. I will think no more about her, ever.”
    Dennis K Hausker, Primitives of Kar



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