Jennifer > Jennifer's Quotes

Showing 1-30 of 46
« previous 1
sort by

  • #1
    Jennifer Egan
    “There's a fine line between thinking about somebody and thinking about not thinking about somebody, but I have the patience and the self-control to walk that line for hours - days, if I have to.”
    Jennifer Egan, A Visit from the Goon Squad

  • #2
    Jennifer Egan
    “Like all failed experiments, that one taught me something I didn’t expect: one key ingredient of so-called experience is the delusional faith that it is unique and special, that those included in it are privileged and those excluded from it are missing out.”
    Jennifer Egan, A Visit from the Goon Squad

  • #3
    Jennifer Egan
    “She was clean": no piercings, tattoos, or scarifications. All the kids were now. And who could blame them, Alex thought, after watching three generations of flaccid tattoos droop like moth-eaten upholstery over poorly stuffed biceps and saggy asses?”
    Jennifer Egan, A Visit from the Goon Squad

  • #4
    Jennifer Egan
    “Rebecca was an academic star. Her new book was on the phenomenon of word casings, a term she'd invented for words that no longer had meaning outside quotation marks. English was full of these empty words--"friend" and "real" and "story" and "change"--words that had been shucked of their meanings and reduced to husks. Some, like "identity" and "search" and "cloud," had clearly been drained of life by their Web usage. With others, the reasons were more complex; how had "American" become an ironic term? How had "democracy" come to be used in an arch, mocking way?”
    Jennifer Egan, A Visit from the Goon Squad

  • #5
    Jennifer Egan
    “See," Sasha muttered, eyeing the sun. "It's mine.”
    Jennifer Egan, A Visit from the Goon Squad

  • #6
    Jennifer Egan
    “That we have some history together that hasn’t happened yet.”
    Jennifer Egan, A Visit from the Goon Squad

  • #7
    Jennifer Egan
    “Everyone we've lost, we'll find. Or they'll find us.”
    Jennifer Egan, A Visit from the Goon Squad

  • #8
    Jennifer Egan
    “Sometimes I imagine myself looking back on right now and I think like where will I be standing when I look back Will right now look like the beginning of a great life or... or what”
    Jennifer Egan, A Visit from the Goon Squad

  • #9
    Jennifer Egan
    “time's a goon”
    Jennifer Egan, A Visit from the Goon Squad

  • #10
    Jennifer Egan
    “Oh we'll know each other forever, Bix says. The days of losing touch are almost gone.”
    Jennifer Egan, A Visit from the Goon Squad

  • #11
    Laurie Fabiano
    “when people love each other, they always find each other in the end.”
    Laurie Fabiano

  • #12
    Laurie Fabiano
    “Concetta and Domenico Costa, Mariana Pontillo, the Arena family. We live.”
    Laurie Fabiano

  • #13
    David  Mitchell
    “A half-read book is a half-finished love affair.”
    David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas

  • #14
    David  Mitchell
    “What wouldn't I give now for a never-changing map of the ever-constant ineffable? To possess, as it were, an atlas of clouds.”
    David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas

  • #15
    David  Mitchell
    “Lying's wrong, but when the world spins backwards, a small wrong may be a big right.”
    David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas

  • #16
    David  Mitchell
    Exposition: the workings of the actual past + the virtual past may be illustrated by an event well known to collective history, such as the sinking of the Titanic. The disaster as it actually occurred descends into obscurity as its eyewitnesses die off, documents perish + the wreck of the ship dissolves in its Atlantic grave. Yet a virtual sinking of the Titanic, created from reworked memories, papers, hearsay, fiction--in short, belief--grows ever "truer." The actual past is brittle, ever-dimming + ever more problematic to access + reconstruct: in contrast, the virtual past is malleable, ever-brightening + ever more difficult to circumvent/expose as fraudulent.

    The present presses the virtual past into its own service, to lend credence to its mythologies + legitimacy to the imposition of will. Power seeks + is the right to "landscape" the virtual past. (He who pays the historian calls the tune.)

    Symmetry demands an actual + virtual
    future too. We imagine how next week, next year, or 2225 will shape up--a virtual future, constructed by wishes, prophecies + daydreams. This virtual future may influence the actual future, as in a self-fulfilling prophecy, but the actual future will eclipse our virtual one as surely as tomorrow eclipses today. Like Utopia, the actual future + the actual past exist only in the hazy distance, where they are no good to anyone.

    Q: Is there a meaningful distinction between one simulacrum of smoke, mirrors + shadows--the actual past--from another such simulacrum--the actual future?

    One model of time: an infinite matryoshka doll of painted moments, each "shell" (the present) encased inside a nest of "shells" (previous presents) I call the actual past but which we perceive as the virtual past. The doll of "now"likewise encases a nest of presents yet to be, which I call the actual future but which we
    perceive as the virtual future.
    David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas

  • #17
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón
    “The moment you stop to think about whether you love someone, you've already stopped loving that person forever.”
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón, The Shadow of the Wind

  • #18
    Diane Setterfield
    “All morning I struggled with the sensation of stray wisps of one world seeping through the cracks of another. Do you know the feeling when you start reading a new book before the membrane of the last one has had time to close behind you? You leave the previous book with ideas and themes -- characters even -- caught in the fibers of your clothes, and when you open the new book, they are still with you.”
    Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

  • #19
    Diane Setterfield
    “People disappear when they die. Their voice, their laughter, the warmth of their breath. Their flesh. Eventually their bones. All living memory of them ceases. This is both dreadful and natural. Yet for some there is an exception to this annihilation. For in the books they write they continue to exist. We can rediscover them. Their humor, their tone of voice, their moods. Through the written word they can anger you or make you happy. They can comfort you. They can perplex you. They can alter you. All this, even though they are dead. Like flies in amber, like corpses frozen in the ice, that which according to the laws of nature should pass away is, by the miracle of ink on paper, preserved. It is a kind of magic.”
    Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale

  • #20
    Elizabeth Kostova
    “As you know, human history is full of evil deeds, and maybe we ought to think of them with tears, not fascination.”
    Elizabeth Kostova, The Historian

  • #21
    Elizabeth Kostova
    “As an adult I have often known that peculiar legacy time brings to the traveler: the longing to seek out a place a second time, to find deliberately what we stumbled on once before, to recapture the feeling of discovery. Sometimes we search out again even a place that was not remarkable itself - we look for it simply because we remember it. If we do find it, of course, everything is different. The rough-hewn door is still there, but it's much smaller; the day is cloudy instead of brilliant; it's spring instead of autumn; we're alone instead of with three friends. Or worse, with three friends instead of alone.”
    Elizabeth Kostova, The Historian

  • #22
    Erica Jong
    “I had gone to graduate school because I loved literature, but in graduate school you were not supposed to study literature. You were supposed to study criticism. Some professor wrote a book 'proving' that TOM JONES was really a Marxist parable. Some other professor wrote a book 'proving' that TOM JONES was really a Christian parable. Some other professor wrote a book 'proving' that TOM JONES was really a parable of the Industrial Revolution. . . . Nobody seemed to give a shit about your reading TOM JONES as long as you could reel off the names of the various theories and who invented them. . . . My response was to sleep through as much of it as possible. ”
    Erica Jong, Fear of Flying

  • #23
    Irène Némirovsky
    “But what is certain is that in five, ten or twenty years, this problem unique to our time, according to him, will no longer exist, it will be replaced by others...Yet this music, the sound of this rain on the windows, the great mournful creaking of the cedar tree in the garden outside, this moment, so tender, so strange in the middle of war, this will never change, not this, this is forever.”
    Irene Nemirovsky, Suite Francaise

  • #24
    Irène Némirovsky
    “What separates or unites people is not their language, their laws, their customs, their principles, but the way they hold their knife and fork.”
    Irène Némirovsky, Suite Française

  • #25
    Irène Némirovsky
    “These two sections [of Irene Nemirovsky's Suite Francaise], plus some of the author's notes, are all we have -- this in itself is a tragedy and waste of war. Had this novel been finished we would be hailing it as one of the supreme works of literature. As it stands, it is like a great cathedral gutted by a bomb. The ruined shell still soars to heaven, a reminder of the human spirit triumphing despite human destructiveness.”
    Irène Némirovsky, Suite Française

  • #26
    Jennifer E. Smith
    “It's not the changes that will break your heart; it's that tug of familiarity.”
    Jennifer E. Smith, The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight

  • #27
    Dave Eggers
    “We are not meant to know everything, Mae. Did you ever think that perhaps our minds are delicately calibrated between the known and the unknown? That our souls need the mysteries of night and the clarity of day? Young people are creating ever-present daylight, and I think it will burn us all alive. There will be no time to reflect, to sleep to cool.”
    Dave Eggers, The Circle

  • #28
    Meg Wolitzer
    “...he’s infuriated that his e-reader allows him to only know the percentage of a book he’s read, not the number of pages. This, he thinks, is 92 percent stupid.”
    Meg Wolitzer, The Interestings

  • #29
    Nicole Krauss
    “Even now, all possible feelings do not yet exist, there are still those that lie beyond our capacity and our imagination. From time to time, when a piece of music no one has ever written or a painting no one has ever painted, or something else impossible to predict, fathom or yet describe takes place, a new feeling enters the world. And then, for the millionth time in the history of feeling, the heart surges and absorbs the impact.”
    Nicole Krauss, The History of Love

  • #30
    Neil Gaiman
    “I believe that mankind's destiny lies in the stars. I believe that candy really did taste better when I was a kid, that it's aerodynamically impossible for a bumble bee to fly, that light is a wave and a particle, that there's a cat in a box somewhere who's alive and dead at the same time (although if they don't ever open the box to feed it it'll eventually just be two different kinds of dead), and that there are stars in the universe billions of years older than the universe itself.”
    Neil Gaiman



Rss
« previous 1