Tim Parrent > Tim's Quotes

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  • #1
    Sara Pascoe
    “Oscar looked up from his plate, and if a cat could laugh, he would have. ‘Boy, that’s ugly, even for a jinn. Looks like a cross between a rat, a frog and a bottlebrush.”
    Sara Pascoe, Being a Witch, and Other Things I Didn't Ask For

  • #2
    Therisa Peimer
    “Her husband's visage captivated her from the first moment she saw him step out of the royal carriage a hundred years ago. How could it not? Flaminius was utterly gorgeous. But once she fell in love with him, she became happily enslaved.”
    Therisa Peimer, Taming Flame

  • #3
    Chris Cleave
    “With love, one could glow. One did not need the intense flame after all. Now”
    Chris Cleave, Everyone Brave is Forgiven

  • #4
    Rebecca Skloot
    “But Carrel wasn’t interested in immortality for the masses. He was a eugenicist: organ transplantation and life extension were ways to preserve what he saw as the superior white race, which he believed was being polluted by less intelligent and inferior stock, namely the poor, uneducated, and nonwhite. He dreamed of never-ending life for those he deemed worthy, and death or forced sterilization for everyone else. He’d later praise Hitler for the “energetic measures” he took in that direction.”
    Rebecca Skloot, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks

  • #5
    Jeannette Walls
    “Things usually work out in the end."
    "What if they don't?"
    "That just means you haven't come to the end yet.”
    Jeannette Walls, The Glass Castle

  • #6
    Susan Cain
    “Use your natural powers—of persistence, concentration, insight, and sensitivity—to do work you love and work that matters. Solve problems, make art, think deeply.”
    Susan Cain, Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking

  • #7
    Heath Sommer
    “You have a peace about you. You have a wisdom. You have a way of living life that kicks my butt and pushes me around, and it beats me out of my idiocy and narrow-mindness. You, Addy, you, have shown me what life is all about”
    Heath Sommer

  • #8
    Émile Zola
    “The sea with its perpetual oscillation, that obstinate swell sweeping up to the cliffs twice a day, exasperated him: it was senseless force, indifferent to his grief, wearing down the same rocks for centuries while never mourning the death of a single human being. it was too vast, too cold; and he would hurry home and shut himself indoors, to feel less insignificant, less crushed between the dual infinities of sea and sky.”
    Émile Zola, The Bright Side of Life

  • #9
    Tim Butcher
    “….So much crueller than any British colony, they say, so much more brutal towards the local Africans, so much more manipulative after begrudgingly granting independence. But the history of British colonialism in Africa, from Sierra Leone to Zimbabwe, Kenya to Botswana and else-where, is not fundamentally different from what Belgium did in the Congo. You can argue about degree, but both systems were predicated on the same assumption: that white outsiders knew best and Africans were to be treated not as partners, but as underlings. What the British did in Kenya to suppress the pro-independence mau-mau uprising in the 1950s, using murder, torture and mass imprisonment, was no more excusable than the mass arrests and political assassinations committed by Belgium when it was trying to cling on to the Congo. And the outside world's tolerance of a dictator in the Congo like Mobutu, whose corruption and venality were overlooked for strategic expedience, was no different from what happened in Zimbabwe, where the dictator Robert Mugabe was allowed to run his country and its people into the ground because Western powers gullibly accepted the way he presented himself as the only leader able to guarantee stability and an end to civil strife. Those sniffy British colonial types might not like to admit it, but the Congo represents the quintessence of the entire continent’s colonial experience. It might be extreme and it might be shocking, but what happened in the Congo is nothing but colonialism in its purest, basest form.”
    Tim Butcher, Blood River: A Journey to Africa’s Broken Heart

  • #10
    Barbara W. Tuchman
    “Awful momentum makes carrying through easier than calling off folly.”
    Barbara W. Tuchman, The March of Folly: From Troy to Vietnam

  • #11
    Munro Leaf
    “I like it better here where I can sit just quietly and smell the flowers.”
    Munro Leaf, The Story of Ferdinand

  • #12
    Bryce Courtenay
    “It's who you is when folks knocks at the door of your heart what counts. Hide the past and it gives them what's jealous of you the power to bring you undone.”
    Bryce Courtenay

  • #13
    Tracy Chevalier
    “I have consistently loved books that I've read when I've been sick in bed.”
    Tracy Chevalier



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