Aaron Browder > Aaron's Quotes

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  • #1
    Stephen        King
    “The road to hell is paved with adverbs.”
    Stephen King, On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft

  • #2
    Stephen        King
    “When his life was ruined, his family killed, his farm destroyed, Job knelt down on the ground and yelled up to the heavens, "Why god? Why me?" and the thundering voice of God answered, There's just something about you that pisses me off.”
    Stephen King, Storm of the Century

  • #3
    Stephen        King
    “Get busy living or get busy dying.”
    Stephen King, Different Seasons

  • #4
    Stephen        King
    “Politics always change. Stories never do.”
    Stephen King, It

  • #5
    Stephen        King
    “once you get into cosmological shit like this, you got to throw away the instruction manual”
    Stephen King, It

  • #6
    Stephen        King
    “You can't be careful on a skateboard.”
    Stephen King, It

  • #7
    Chuck Wendig
    “Use the words that live inside your head. And if the words that live inside your head are those of a sentimental Victorian troubadour, then please close your head in a door jamb until you kill all that overwrought prose in an act of brain damage.”
    Chuck Wendig, 250 Things You Should Know About Writing

  • #8
    Chuck Wendig
    “If you want to find the way forward, then stop looking for maps and start walking.”
    Chuck Wendig

  • #9
    Chuck Wendig
    “Always quick with the wit. It's your defense, isn't it? Little girl doesn't want the world to know how sad she is, how damaged. Your words, your attitude, all a big misdirection. A magician's trick.”
    Chuck Wendig, Mockingbird

  • #10
    Philip Pullman
    “Even if it means oblivion, friends, I'll welcome it, because it won't be nothing. We'll be alive again in a thousand blades of grass, and a million leaves; we'll be falling in the raindrops and blowing in the fresh breeze; we'll be glittering in the dew under the stars and the moon out there in the physical world, which is our true home and always was.”
    Philip Pullman, The Amber Spyglass

  • #11
    John C. Holt
    “The idea of painless, nonthreatening coercion is an illusion. Fear is the inseparable companion of coercion, and its inescapable consequence. If you think it your duty to make children do what you want, whether they will or not, then it follows inexorably that you must make them afraid of what will happen to them if they don’t do what you want. You can do this in the old-fashioned way, openly and avowedly, with the threat of harsh words, infringement of liberty, or physical punishment. Or you can do it in the modern way, subtly, smoothly, quietly, by withholding the acceptance and approval which you and others have trained the children to depend on; or by making them feel that some retribution awaits them in the future, too vague to imagine but too implacable to escape.”
    John Holt, How Children Fail

  • #12
    John C. Holt
    “Not long after the book came out I found myself being driven to a meeting
    by a professor of electrical engineering in the graduate school I of MIT. He said that after reading the book he realized that his graduate students were using on him, and had used for the ten years and more he had been teaching there, all the evasive strategies I described in the book — mumble, guess-and-look, take a wild guess and see what happens, get the teacher to answer his own questions, etc.

    But as I later realized, these are the games that all humans play when others
    are sitting in judgment on them.”
    John Holt, How Children Fail

  • #13
    John C. Holt
    “For a very long time, ever since men formed societies in which some people bossed others, children have fulfilled this very important function. Every adult parent, however lowly or powerless, had at least some one that he could command, threaten, and punish. No man was so poor, even a slave, that he could not have these few slaves of his own. Today, when most “free” men feel like slaves, having their own homegrown slaves is very satisfying. Many could not do without them.”
    John Holt, Escape From Childhood: The Needs and Rights of Children



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