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  • #1
    George Saunders
    “Only then (nearly out the door, so to speak) did I realize how unspeakably beautiful all of this was, how precisely engineered for our pleasure, and saw that I was on the brink of squandering a wondrous gift, the gift of being allowed, every day, to wander this vast sensual paradise, this grand marketplace lovingly stocked with every sublime thing.”
    George Saunders, Lincoln in the Bardo

  • #2
    Richard Powers
    “There are a hundred thousand species of love, separately invented, each more ingenious than the last, and every one of them keeps making things.”
    Richard Powers, The Overstory

  • #3
    N.K. Jemisin
    “According to legend, Father Earth did not originally hate life. In fact, as the lorists tell it, once upon a time Earth did everything he could to facilitate the strange emergence of life on his surface. He crafted even, predictable seasons; kept changes of wind and wave and temperature slow enough that every living being could adapt, evolve; summoned waters that purified themselves, skies that always cleared after a storm. He did not create life—that was happenstance—but he was pleased and fascinated by it, and proud to nurture such strange wild beauty upon his surface. Then people began to do horrible things to Father Earth. They poisoned waters beyond even his ability to cleanse, and killed much of the other life that lived on his surface. They drilled through the crust of his skin, past the blood of his mantle, to get at the sweet marrow of his bones. And at the height of human hubris and might, it was the orogenes who did something that even Earth could not forgive: They destroyed his only child.”
    N.K. Jemisin, The Fifth Season

  • #4
    Anthony Doerr
    “I have heard," Omeir says, "that this is a place that protects books.”
    Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land

  • #5
    Lily King
    “When you die, she thought now, you can no longer give love. You can't give love anymore. She wouldn't be able to love her children. It struck her suddenly as the very worst thing about death, worse than not being able to breathe or laugh or kiss. A kind of existential suffocation, to not be able to give her children her love anymore.”
    Lily King, Five Tuesdays in Winter



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