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  • #1
    Hanya Yanagihara
    “And so I try to be kind to everything I see, and in everything I see, I see him.”
    Hanya Yanagihara, A Little Life

  • #2
    Hanya Yanagihara
    “What he knew, he knew from books, and books lied, they made things prettier.”
    Hanya Yanagihara, A Little Life

  • #3
    Lisa See
    “Tea reminds us to slow down and escape the pressures of modern life,” he says”
    Lisa See, The Tea Girl of Hummingbird Lane

  • #4
    Vladimir Nabokov
    “There was a time in my demented youth
    When somehow I suspected that the truth
    About survival after death was known
    To every human being: I alone
    Knew nothing, and a great conspiracy
    Of books and people hid the truth from me.”
    Vladimir Nabokov, Pale Fire

  • #5
    Alexandre Dumas
    “Nothing makes time pass or shortens the way like a thought that absorbs in itself all the faculties of the one who is thinking. External existence is then like a sleep of which this thought is the dream. Under its influence, time has no more measure, space has no more distance.”
    Alexandre Dumas, The Three Musketeers

  • #6
    Alexandre Dumas
    “Never fear quarrels, but seek hazardous adventures.”
    Alexandre Dumas, The Three Musketeers

  • #7
    Alexandre Dumas
    “A rogue does not laugh in the same way that an honest man does; a hypocrite does not shed the tears of a man of good faith. All falsehood is a mask; and however well made the mask may be, with a little attention we may always succeed in distinguishing it from the true face.”
    Alexandre Dumas, Three Musketeers

  • #8
    Anthony Doerr
    “I have been feeling very clearheaded lately and what I want to write about today is the sea. It contains so many colors. Silver at dawn, green at noon, dark blue in the evening. Sometimes it looks almost red. Or it will turn the color of old coins. Right now the shadows of clouds are dragging across it, and patches of sunlight are touching down everywhere. White strings of gulls drag over it like beads.

    It is my favorite thing, I think, that I have ever seen. Sometimes I catch myself staring at it and forget my duties. It seems big enough to contain everything anyone could ever feel.”
    Anthony Doerr, All the Light We Cannot See

  • #9
    Tara Westover
    “The decisions I made after that moment were not the ones she would have made. They were the choices of a changed person, a new self.
    You could call this selfhood many things. Transformation. Metamorphosis. Falsity. Betrayal.
    I call it an education”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #10
    Hanya Yanagihara
    “...things get broken, and sometimes they get repaired, and in most cases, you realize that no matter what gets damaged, life rearranges itself to compensate for your loss, sometimes wonderfully.”
    Hanya Yanagihara, A Little Life

  • #11
    Hanya Yanagihara
    “Why wasn’t friendship as good as a relationship? Why wasn’t it even better? It was two people who remained together, day after day, bound not by sex or physical attraction or money or children or property, but only by the shared agreement to keep going, the mutual dedication to a union that could never be codified.”
    Hanya Yanagihara, A Little Life

  • #12
    Hanya Yanagihara
    “Fairness is for happy people, for people who have been lucky enough to have lived a life defined more by certainties than by ambiguities.
    Right and wrong, however, are for—well, not unhappy people, maybe, but scarred people; scared people.”
    Hanya Yanagihara, A Little Life

  • #13
    Kristin Hannah
    “Books are the mile markers of my life. Some people have family photos or home movies to record their past. I’ve got books. Characters. For as long as I can remember, books have been my safe place.”
    Kristin Hannah, The Great Alone

  • #14
    Kristin Hannah
    “Leni had never known anyone who had died before. She had seen death on television and read about it in her beloved books, but now she saw the truth of it. In literature, death was many things - a message, catharsis, retribution. There were deaths that came from a beating heart that stopped and deaths of another kind, a choice made, like Frodo going to the Grey Havens. Death made you cry, filled you with sadness, but in the best of her books, there was peace, too, satisfaction, a sense of the story ending as it should.

    In real life, she saw, it wasn't like that. It was sadness opening up inside of you, changing how you saw the world.”
    Kristin Hannah, The Great Alone

  • #15
    Kristin Hannah
    “You have a child, so you know. You are my heart, baby girl. You are everything I did right. And I want you to know I would do it all again, every wonderful terrible second of it. I would do years and years of it again for one minute with you.”
    Kristin Hannah, The Great Alone

  • #16
    Kristin Hannah
    “I think you stand by the people you love.”
    Kristin Hannah, The Great Alone

  • #17
    Charles Frazier
    “Take a king or a president or anybody. Put a heavy sack of gold in one hand and a feather-light declaration about freedom in the other. And then an outlaw sticks a pistol in his face and says give me one or the other. Every time—every ten out of ten —he'll hug the sack and throw away the ideals. Because the sack’s what’s behind the ideals, like the foundation under a building.”
    Charles Frazier, Varina

  • #18
    Charles Frazier
    “You’ll find that as you grow old, you stop bothering to hide the self you’ve been all along.”
    Charles Frazier, Varina

  • #19
    Charles Frazier
    “the you you are with others is not you. To be lonesome is to be who you most fully are.”
    Charles Frazier, Varina

  • #20
    Charles Frazier
    “I wonder what people talk about who've destroyed their lives with addictions other than books and politics and money and war.”
    Charles Frazier, Varina

  • #21
    Sylvia Plath
    “Is it the sea you hear in me?
    Its dissatisfactions?
    Or the voice of nothing, that was your madness?

    Love is a shadow.
    How you lie and cry after it.

    --from "Elm", written 19 April 1962”
    Sylvia Plath, Ariel: The Restored Edition

  • #22
    Richard Powers
    “To be human is to confuse a satisfying story with a meaningful one, and to mistake life for something huge with two legs. No: life is mobilized on a vastly larger scale, and the world is failing precisely because no novel can make the contest for the world seem as compelling as the struggles between a few lost people.”
    Richard Powers, The Overstory

  • #23
    Richard Powers
    “Kindness may look for something in return, but that doesn’t make it any less kind.”
    Richard Powers, The Overstory

  • #24
    Richard Powers
    “Something shines out, a truth so self-evident that the words dictate themselves. We’re cashing in a billion years of planetary savings bonds and blowing it on assorted bling.”
    Richard Powers, The Overstory

  • #25
    Richard Powers
    “Humans carry around legacy behaviors and biases, jerry-rigged holdovers from earlier stages of evolution that follow their own obsolete rules. What seem like erratic, irrational choices are, in fact, strategies created long ago for solving other kinds of problems. We’re all trapped in the bodies of sly, social-climbing opportunists shaped to survive the savanna by policing each other.”
    Richard Powers, The Overstory

  • #26
    Vladimir Nabokov
    “Nostalgia in reverse, the longing for yet another strange land, grew especially strong in spring.”
    Vladimir Nabokov, Mary

  • #27
    Vladimir Nabokov
    “He was powerless because he had no precise desire, and this tortured him because he was vainly seeking something to desire. He could not even make himself stretch out his hand to switch on the light. The simple transition from intention to action seemed an unimaginable miracle.”
    Vladimir Nabokov, Mary

  • #28
    Vladimir Nabokov
    “...memory can restore to life everything except smells, although nothing revives the past so completely as a smell that was once associated with it.”
    Vladimir Nabokov, Mary

  • #29
    Vladimir Nabokov
    “The day, like the previous days, dragged sluggishly by in a kind of insipid idleness, devoid even of that dreamy expectancy which can make idleness so enchanting.”
    Vladimir Nabokov, Mary

  • #30
    Vladimir Nabokov
    “Where is the happiness, the sunshine, where are those thick skittles of wood which crashed and bounced so nicely, where is my bicycle with the low handlebars and the big gear? It seems there's a law which says that nothing ever vanishes, that matter is indestructible; therefore the chips from my skittles and the spokes of my bicycle still exist somewhere to this day. The pity of it is that I'll never find them again - never.”
    Vladimir Nabokov, Mary



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