Roberto > Roberto's Quotes

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  • #1
    Sara Pascoe
    “Even though it's only a minority of men who are violent or predatory, I don't know if men realise that girls are trained our entire lives to minimise the danger from you - and blamed if we don't.”
    Sara Pascoe

  • #2
    Gabriel F.W. Koch
    “A ray of sunlight poked through the mass of angry clouds.”
    Gabriel F.W. Koch, Steel Blood

  • #3
    Candace L. Talmadge
    “Helen was lost and isolated, unable to participate with the rest of
    the group. She was outside the circle with no sense of any connection
    to a Creator, and no concept of what unconditional love might feel
    like. If any type of God had indeed created her, then that Deity had
    made a mistake too cruel to forgive.”
    Candace L. Talmadge, Stoneslayer: Book One Scandal

  • #4
    Lesley Glaister
    “Doll bends over, checking a barrel; she got hips on her under that skirt, sturdy, bovine, though she’d kill him if he said as much. His cheek yearns for her lap, for her stroking hands, for her fantastically common reek of beer and ham and Parma Violets.”
    Lesley Glaister, Blasted Things

  • #5
    A.R. Merrydew
    “The computer began to titter. ‘Well it’s a long story honey, but the concise version is this. Talalia has been a bad girl. She was grounded for six months after her last trip.”
    A.R. Merrydew, Inara

  • #6
    “There will be a time when I will answer everything, Avelyn. But it is far in the future for you.”
    Jack Borden, The Lost City: An Epic YA Fantasy Novel

  • #7
    “Oh shoot. That’s the kind of stuff that gets me in trouble. My Gram is right. I got a bad mouth.”
    R. Gerry Fabian, Just Out Of Reach

  • #8
    Kiera Cass
    “Didn't they know who I was, what they'd trained me for? I was Eadlyn Schreave. No one was more powerful than me.
    So if they thought I was going down without a fight, they were sadly mistaken.”
    Kiera Cass, The Heir

  • #9
    Alexis de Tocqueville
    “Religion regards civil liberty as a noble exercise of man’s faculties, the world of politics being a sphere intended by the Creator for the free play of intelligence. Religion, being free and powerful within its own sphere and content with the position reserved for it, realized that its sway is all the better established because it relies only on its own powers and rules men’s hearts without external support.
    Freedom sees religion as the companion of its struggles and triumphs, the cradle of its infancy, and the divine source of its rights. Religion is considered as the guardian of mores, and mores are regarded as the guarantee of the laws and pledge for the maintenance of freedom itself.”
    Alexis de Tocqueville

  • #10
    Tennessee Williams
    “But once you fully apprehend the vacuity of a life without struggle you are equipped with the basic means of salvation. Once you know this is true, that the heart of man, his body and his brain, are forged in a white-hot furnace for the purpose of conflict (the struggle of creation) and that with the conflict removed, the man is a sword cutting daisies, that not privation but luxury is the wolf at the door and that the fangs of this wolf are all the little vanities and laxities that Success is heir to--why, then with this knowledge you are at least in a position of knowing where the danger lies.”
    Tennessee Williams

  • #11
    Eric Schlosser
    “The first duty of the command and control system is to survive,” Baran argued, proposing a distributed network with hundreds or thousands of separate nodes connected through multiple paths. Messages would be broken into smaller “blocks,” sent along the first available path, and reassembled at their final destination. If nodes were out of service or destroyed, the network would automatically adapt and send the data along a route that was still intact. Baran’s work later provided the conceptual basis for the top secret communications networks at the Pentagon, as well as their civilian offshoot, the Internet.”
    Eric Schlosser, Command and Control: Nuclear Weapons, the Damascus Accident, and the Illusion of Safety

  • #12
    Jean-Dominique Bauby
    “Sometimes the phone interrupts our work, and I take advantage of Sandrine’s presence to be in touch with loved ones, to intercept and catch passing fragments of life, the way you catch a butterfly.”
    Jean-Dominique Bauby, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly



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