Hunter Krake > Hunter's Quotes

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  • #1
    Max Nowaz
    “I wanted to thank you for saving my life. I am still puzzled about your motives
though. Was it revenge against Zedan for rejecting you?”
“You insult me. It seems that you think of everybody in the same lowly terms you
think of yourself. If there is anybody I should hate for Zedan rejecting me, it should be
you. He was only doing what is expected of him in our society.”
“You mean you don't hate me?” This was a new revelation to Brown. It worried him.
He was used to hate, he could deal with it, but this he could not understand, he had used
the girl ruthlessly and yet she did not hate him.”
    Max Nowaz, The Arbitrator

  • #2
    Kyle Keyes
    “Donde, he offered a piece of candy to a little
       boy.”
    Kyle Keyes, Under the Bus

  • #3
    Gabriel F.W. Koch
    “You sound like you’re enjoying my suffering.”
    Gabriel F.W. Koch, Death Leaves a Shadow

  • #4
    Walter M. Miller Jr.
    “If he’s lonely, why does he insist on living like a hermit?”
    “To escape loneliness – in a young world.”
    The young priest laughed. “That perhaps makes his kind of sense, Domne, but I don’t quite see it.”
    “You will, when you’re my age, or his.”
    Walter M. Miller Jr., A Canticle for Leibowitz

  • #5
    Eoin Colfer
    “I'm the nut!”
    Eoin Colfer, The Atlantis Complex

  • #6
    Euripides
    “death is the only water to wash away this dirt”
    Euripides, Medea
    tags: medea

  • #7
    Gayle Forman
    “So, this is how it's become? This is how I've become? A walking contradiction? I'm surrounded by people and feel alone. I claim to crave a bit of normalcy but now that I have some, it's like I don't know what to do with it, I don't know how to be a normal person anymore.”
    Gayle Forman, Where She Went

  • #8
    Italo Calvino
    “It was the hour in which objects lose the consistency of shadow that accompanies them during the night and gradually reacquire colors, but seem to cross meanwhile an uncertain limbo, faintly touched, just breathed on by light; the hour in which one is least certain of the world's existence.”
    Italo Calvino, The Nonexistent Knight & The Cloven Viscount

  • #9
    Salman Rushdie
    “Most of what matters in our lives takes place in our absence.”
    Salman Rushdie, Midnight’s Children
    tags: life

  • #10
    Sara Gruen
    “You do right by me, I'll show you a life most suckers can't even dream of.”
    Sara Gruen, Water for Elephants

  • #11
    Marjane Satrapi
    “And so I was lost, without any bearings... what could be worse than that?”
    Marjane Satrapi, The Complete Persepolis

  • #12
    Frank Herbert
    “A person needs new experiences. They jar something deep inside, allowing you to grow. Without them, it sleeps- seldom to awaken. The sleeper must awaken. ”
    Frank Herbert

  • #13
    Michael G. Kramer
    “Navarre asserted, “We have such powerful forces and so strong a defence system that Dien Bien Phu is an impregnable fortress!” the American Lieutenant General “Iron Mike” O’Daniel also shared that opinion.”
    Michael G. Kramer, A Gracious Enemy & After the War Volume One

  • #14
    A.R. Merrydew
    “    The weapon gave a rusty croak. ‘I don’t normally do weather reports anymore,’ the gun informed him politely.
         ‘Why is that?’
         ‘Ever since the demise of the old metropolis, there has been no control of the weather systems. Anyone who would have appreciated a weather forecast perished an awful long time ago. Besides, every time I started to inform my potential victims of the current cloud formations, or wind velocity, or barometric pressure, or potential precipitation, they simply ran away.”
    A.R. Merrydew, Our Blue Orange

  • #15
    Karl Braungart
    “This can only be an urgent call at this late hour.”
    Karl Braungart, Fatal Identity

  • #16
    Ajay Agrawal
    “We are narrow thinkers, we are noisy thinkers, and it is very easy to improve upon us.”
    ajay agrawal, Prediction Machines: The Simple Economics of Artificial Intelligence

  • #17
    Bram Stoker
    “Our toil must be in silence, and our efforts all in secret; for this enlightened age, when men believe not even what they see, the doubting of wise men would be his greatest strength.”
    Bram Stoker, Dracula

  • #18
    Carson McCullers
    “It looks to me like everything has just walked off and left me”
    Carson McCullers, The Member of the Wedding

  • #19
    Diana Gabaldon
    “Why d'ye talk to yourself?'
    'It assures me of a good listener.”
    Diana Gabaldon, A Breath of Snow and Ashes

  • #20
    Jalal ad-Din Muhammad ar-Rumi
    “Keep walking, though there's no place to get to.
    Don't try to see through the distances.
    That's not for human beings. Move within,
    But don't move the way fear makes you move.”
    Mawlana Jalal-al-Din Rumi

  • #21
    Rainbow Rowell
    “I’m hopelessly in love with him.”
    Rainbow Rowell, Carry On

  • #22
    Ernest J. Gaines
    “The artist must be like a heart surgeon. He must approach something with sympathy, but with a sort of coldness and work and work until he finds some kind of perfection in his work. You can't have blood splashing all over the place. Things must be done very cleanly.”
    Ernest J. Gaines, Conversations with Ernest Gaines

  • #23
    “Charity is a very labour-intensive virtue.”
    Garth Nix, Mister Monday

  • #24
    Herman Wouk
    “The toiling masses,' and all that. This country has no toiling masses, we have Dan at the diner and Verne in the mine and Jerry in the steel mill and Burdette at the filling station and so on. They don't toil, for Christ's sake, they do a day's work and then they go home and have a beer. You can't get them into a mass for anything. If there's a good ball game on TV they won't come out to see the president ride by.”
    Herman Wouk, Youngblood Hawke

  • #25
    Stendhal
    “Love of the head has doubtless more intelligence than true love, but it only has moments of enthusiasm. It knows itself too well, it sits in judgement on itself incessantly; far from distracting thought, it is made by sheer force of thought.”
    Stendhal, The Red and the Black

  • #26
    Daphne du Maurier
    “She sat with her chin cupped in her hands, her eyes fixed on the window splashed with mud and rain, hoping with a sort of desperate interest that some ray of light would break the heavy blanket of sky, and but a momentary trace of that lost blue heaven that had mantled Helford yesterday shine for an instant as a forerunner of fortune.”
    Daphne du Maurier, Jamaica Inn



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