Lorenzo > Lorenzo's Quotes

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  • #1
    Alice Oseman
    “In the end, that was the problem with romance. It was so easy to romanticise romance because it was everywhere. It was in music and on TV and in filtered Instagram photos. It was in the air, crisp and alive with fresh possibility. It was in falling leaves, crumbling wooden doorways, scuffed cobblestones and fields of dandelions. It was in the touch of hands, scrawled letters, crumpled sheets and the golden hour. A soft yawn, early morning laugher, shoes lined up together dy the door. Eyes across a dance floor. I could see it all, all the time, all around, but when I got closer, I found nothing was there.”
    Alice Oseman, Loveless

  • #2
    Kate Elizabeth Russell
    “I can’t lose the thing I’ve held onto for so long, you know?” My face twists up from the pain of pushing it out. “I just really need it to be a love story, you know? I really, really need it to be that.”
    “I know,” she says.
    “Because if it isn’t a love story, then what is it”? I look to her glassy eyes, her face of wide open empathy. “It’s my life,” I say. “This has been my whole life.”
    Kate Elizabeth Russell, My Dark Vanessa

  • #3
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “We live in a world where exceptional women have to sit around waiting for mediocre men.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Carrie Soto Is Back

  • #4
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Some men's childhoods are permitted to last forever, but women are so often reminded that there is work to be done.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Carrie Soto Is Back

  • #5
    Sarah J. Maas
    “Why does anything cling to something? Maybe they love wherever they’re going so much that it’s worth it. Maybe they’ll keep coming back, until there’s only one star left. Maybe that one star will make the trip forever, out of the hope that someday—if it keeps coming back often enough—another star will find it again”
    Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury

  • #6
    Sarah J. Maas
    “To the stars who listen—and the dreams that are answered.”
    Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury

  • #7
    John Steinbeck
    “When a child first catches adults out -- when it first walks into his grave little head that adults do not always have divine intelligence, that their judgments are not always wise, their thinking true, their sentences just -- his world falls into panic desolation. The gods are fallen and all safety gone. And there is one sure thing about the fall of gods: they do not fall a little; they crash and shatter or sink deeply into green muck. It is a tedious job to build them up again; they never quite shine. And the child's world is never quite whole again. It is an aching kind of growing.”
    John Steinbeck, East of Eden

  • #8
    Ashley Poston
    “Nothing lasts forever. Not the good things, not the bad. So just find what makes you happy, and do it for as long as you can.”
    Ashley Poston, The Seven Year Slip

  • #9
    Ashley Poston
    “Sometimes the people you loved left you halfway through a story. Sometimes they left you without a goodbye. And, sometimes, they stayed around in little ways. In the memory of a musical. In the smell of their perfume. In the sound of the rain, and the itch for adventure, and the yearning for that liminal space between one airport terminal and the next. I hated her for leaving, and I loved her for staying as long as she could. And I would never wish this pain on anyone.”
    Ashley Poston, The Seven Year Slip

  • #10
    Ashley Poston
    “That was love, wasn't it? It wasn't just a quick drop -- it was falling, over and over again, for your person. It was falling as they became new people. It was learning how to exist with every new breath. It was uncertain and it was undeniably hard, and it wasn't something you could plan for.”
    Ashley Poston, The Seven Year Slip
    tags: love

  • #11
    Ashley Poston
    “Isn't it strange how the world works sometimes? It's never a matter of time, but a matter of timing.”
    Ashley Poston, The Seven Year Slip

  • #12
    Ashley Poston
    “Sometimes the people you love don’t leave you with goodbyes—they just leave.”
    Ashley Poston, The Seven Year Slip

  • #13
    Ashley Poston
    “Because the things that mattered most never really left. The love stays. The love always stays, and so do we.”
    Ashley Poston, The Seven Year Slip

  • #14
    Ashley Poston
    “You never commit a mundane moment to memory, thinking it'll be the last time you'll hear their voice, or see their smile, or smell their perfume. Your head never remembers the things your heart wants to in hindsight.”
    Ashley Poston, The Seven Year Slip

  • #15
    Victoria Schwab
    “...it is sad, of course, to forget.
    But it is a lonely thing, to be forgotten.
    To remember when no one else does.”
    V.E. Schwab, The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue

  • #16
    Victoria Schwab
    “A dreamer,” scorns her mother.

    “A dreamer,” mourns her father.

    “A dreamer,” warns Estele.

    Still, it does not seem such a bad word.”
    V.E. Schwab, The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue

  • #17
    Olivie Blake
    “Can you love my brain even when it is small? When it is malevolent? When it is violent? Can you love it even when it does not love me?”
    Olivie Blake, Alone With You in the Ether

  • #18
    Olivie Blake
    “She is in all of his spaces and all of his thoughts. He contemplates formulas and degrees of rationality and they all turn into her. He thinks about time, which has only recently begun, or at least now feels different. He thinks: the Babylonians were wrong; time is made of her.”
    Olivie Blake, Alone With You in the Ether

  • #19
    Olivie Blake
    “You are brilliant. Tell your mind to be kind to you today.”
    Olivie Blake, Alone With You in the Ether

  • #20
    Sally Rooney
    “Gradually the waiting began to feel less like waiting and more like this was simply what life was: the distracting tasks undertaken while the thing you are waiting for continues not to happen.”
    Sally Rooney, Conversations with Friends

  • #21
    Sally Rooney
    “I realised my life would be full of mundane physical suffering, and that there was nothing special about it. Suffering wouldn't make me special, and pretending not to suffer wouldn't make me special. Talking about it, or even writing about it, would not transform the suffering into something useful.”
    Sally Rooney, Conversations with Friends

  • #22
    Sally Rooney
    “Everyone’s always going through something, aren’t they? That’s life, basically. It’s just more and more things to go through.”
    Sally Rooney, Conversations with Friends

  • #23
    Sally Rooney
    “Things matter to me more than they do to normal people, I thought. I need to relax and let things go. I should experiment with drugs.”
    Sally Rooney, Conversations with Friends

  • #24
    Sally Rooney
    “Things and people moved around me, taking positions in obscure hierarchies, participating in systems I didn't know about and never would. A complex network of objects and concepts. You live through certain things before you understand them. You can't always take the analytical position.”
    Sally Rooney, Conversations with Friends

  • #25
    Sally Rooney
    “Was I kind to others? It was hard to nail down an answer. I worried that if I did turn out to have a personality, it would be one of the unkind ones. Did I only worry about this question because as a woman I felt required to put the needs of others before my own? Was “kindness” just another term for submission in the face of conflict? These were the kind of things I wrote about in my diary as a teenager: as a feminist I have the right not to love anyone.”
    Sally Rooney, Conversations with Friends

  • #26
    Sally Rooney
    “You think everyone you like is special, she said. I'm just a normal person. When you get to like someone, you make them feel like they're different from everyone else. You're doing it with Nick, you did it with me once.”
    Sally Rooney, Conversations with Friends

  • #27
    Sally Rooney
    “You can love more than one person, she said. That's arguable. Why is it any different from having more than one friend? You're friends with me and you also have other friends, does that mean you don't really value me? I don't have other friends, I said.”
    Sally Rooney, Conversations with Friends

  • #28
    Sally Rooney
    “I'm not a religious person but I do sometimes think God made you for me.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #29
    Sally Rooney
    “Marianne had the sense that her real life was happening somewhere very far away, happening without her, and she didn't know if she would ever find out where it was or become part of it.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #30
    Sally Rooney
    “It was culture as class performance, literature fetishised for its ability to take educated people on false emotional journeys, so that they might afterwards feel superior to the uneducated people whose emotional journeys they liked to read about.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People



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