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  • #1
    Paul Auster
    “You think it will never happen to you, that it cannot happen to you, that you are the only person in the world to whom none of these things will ever happen, and then, one by one, they all begin to happen to you, in the same way they happen to everyone else.”
    Paul Auster, Winter Journal

  • #2
    Paul Auster
    “Reading was my escape and my comfort, my consolation, my stimulant of choice: reading for the pure pleasure of it, for the beautiful stillness that surrounds you when you hear an author's words reverberating in your head.”
    Paul Auster, The Brooklyn Follies

  • #3
    Paul Auster
    “I had jumped off the edge, and then, at the very last moment, something reached out and caught me in midair. That something is what I define as love. It is the one thing that can stop a man from falling, powerful enough to negate the laws of gravity.”
    Paul Auster, Moon Palace
    tags: love

  • #4
    Paul Auster
    “When a person is lucky enough to live inside a story, to live inside an imaginary world, the pains of this world disappear. For as long as the story goes on, reality no longer exists.”
    Paul Auster, The Brooklyn Follies

  • #5
    Paul Auster
    “You're too good for this world, and because of that the world will eventually crush you.”
    Paul Auster, Invisible

  • #6
    Paul Auster
    “No one was to blame for what happened, but that does not make it any less difficult to accept. It was all a matter of missed connections, bad timing, blundering in the dark. We were always in the right place at the wrong time, the wrong place at the right time, always just missing each other, always just a few inches from figuring the whole thing out. That's what the story boils down to, I think. A series of lost chances. All the pieces were there from the beginning, but no one knew how to put them together.”
    Paul Auster, Moon Palace

  • #7
    Paul Auster
    “We all want to believe in impossible things, I suppose, to persuade ourselves that miracles can happen.”
    Paul Auster, The Book of Illusions

  • #8
    Paul Auster
    “All men contain several men inside them, and most of us bounce from one self to another without ever knowing who we are.”
    Paul Auster, The Brooklyn Follies

  • #9
    Paul Auster
    “You can't put your feet on the ground until you've touched the sky.”
    Paul Auster

  • #10
    Paul Auster
    “In other words: It seems to me that I will always be happy in the place where I am not. Or, more bluntly: Wherever I am not is the place where I am myself. Or else, taking the bull by the horns: Anywhere out of the world.”
    Paul Auster, The New York Trilogy

  • #11
    Paul Auster
    “I felt the taste of mortality in my mouth, and at that moment I understood that I was not going to live forever. It takes a long time to learn that, but when you finally do, everything changes inside you, you can never be the same again. I was seventeen years old, and all of a sudden, without the slightest flicker of a doubt, I understood that my life was my own, that it belonged to me and no one else.
    I’m talking about freedom, Fogg. A sense of despair that becomes so great, so crushing, so catastrophic, that you have no choice but to be liberated by it. That’s the only choice, or else you crawl into a corner and die.”
    Paul Auster, Moon Palace

  • #12
    Paul Auster
    “The truth of the story lies in the details.”
    Paul Auster, The Brooklyn Follies

  • #13
    Paul Auster
    “The story is not in the words; it's in the struggle.”
    Paul Auster, The New York Trilogy

  • #14
    Paul Auster
    “We construct a narrative for ourselves, and that's the thread that we follow from one day to the next. People who disintegrate as personalities are the ones who lose that thread.”
    Paul Auster

  • #15
    Paul Auster
    “and now we get to the hard part. the endings, the farewells, and the famous last words. if you don't hear from me often, remember that you're in my thoughts.”
    Paul Auster, Moon Palace

  • #16
    Paul Auster
    “That's all I've ever dreamed of, Mr. Bones. To make the world a better place. To bring some beauty to the drab humdrum corners of the soul. You can do it with a toaster, you can do it with a poem, you can do it by reaching out your hand to a stranger. It doesn't matter what form it takes. To leave the world a little better than you found it. That's the best a man can ever do.”
    Paul Auster, Timbuktu

  • #17
    Paul Auster
    “But lost chances are as much a part of life as chances taken, and a
    story cannot dwell on what might have been.”
    Paul Auster, The New York Trilogy

  • #18
    Paul Auster
    “In the end, each life is no more than the
    sum of contingent facts, a chronicle of chance intersections, of flukes, of random events that divulge nothing but their own
    lack of purpose.”
    Paul Auster, The New York Trilogy

  • #19
    Paul Auster
    “Betty died of a broken heart. Some people laugh when they hear that phrase, but that's because they don't know anything about the world. People die of broken hearts. It happens every day, and it will go on happening to the end of time.”
    Paul Auster, Man in the Dark

  • #20
    Paul Auster
    “We exist for ourselves, perhaps, and at times we even have a glimmer of who we are, but in the end we can never be sure, and as our lives go on, we become more and more opaque to ourselves, more and more aware of our own incoherence. No one can cross the boundary into another – for the simple reason that no one can gain access to himself.”
    Paul Auster, The New York Trilogy

  • #21
    Paul Auster
    “You can't see yourself. You know what you look like because of mirrors and photographs, but out there in the world, as you move among your fellow human beings, whether strangers or friends or the most intimate beloveds, your own face is invisible to you. You can see other parts of yourself, arms and legs, hands and feet, shoulders and torso, but only from the front, nothing of the back except the backs of your legs if you twist them into the right position, but not your face, never your face, and in the end - at least as far as others are concerned - your face is who you are, the essential fact of your identity. Passports do not contain pictures of hands and feet. Even you, who have lived inside your body for sixty-four years now, would probably be unable to recognize your foot in an isolated photograph of that foot, not to speak of your ear, or your elbow, or one of your eyes in close-up. All so familiar to you in the context of the whole, but utterly anonymous when taken piece by piece. We are all aliens to ourselves, and if we have any sense of who we are, it is only because we live inside the eyes of others.”
    Paul Auster, Winter Journal

  • #22
    Paul Auster
    “Every book is an image of solitude. It is a tangible object that one can pick up, put down, open, and close, and its words represent many months if not many years, of one man’s solitude, so that with each word one reads in a book one might say to himself that he is confronting a particle of that solitude”
    Paul Auster, The Invention of Solitude

  • #23
    Paul Auster
    “Something happens, Blue thinks, and then it goes on happening forever. It can never be changed, can never be otherwise.”
    Paul Auster, The New York Trilogy

  • #24
    Paul Auster
    “Impossible, I realize, to enter another’s solitude. If it is true that we can ever come to know another human being, even to a small degree, it is only to the extent that he is willing to make himself known. A man will say: I am cold. Or else he will say nothing, and we will see him shivering. Either way, we will know that he is cold. But what of the man who says nothing and does not shiver? Where all is intractable, here all is hermetic and evasive, one can do no more than observe. But whether one can make sense of what he observes is another matter entirely”
    Paul Auster, The Invention of Solitude

  • #25
    Paul Auster
    “Solitary. But not in the sense of being alone. Not solitary in the way Thoreau was, for example, exiling himself in order to find out where he was; not solitary in the way Jonah was, praying for deliverance in the belly of the whale. Solitary in the sense of retreat. In the sense of not having to see himself, of not having to see himself being seen by anyone else.”
    Paul Auster, The Invention of Solitude

  • #26
    Paul Auster
    “I walk around the world like a ghost, and sometimes I question
    whether I even exist. Whether I've ever existed at all.”
    Paul Auster, Travels in the Scriptorium

  • #27
    Paul Auster
    “We find ourselves only by looking to what we’re not.”
    Paul Auster, Moon Palace

  • #28
    Paul Auster
    “Escaping into a film is not like escaping into a book. Books force you to give something back to them, to exercise your intelligence and imagination, where as you can watch a film-and even enjoy it-in a state of mindless passivity.”
    Paul Auster, Man in the Dark

  • #29
    Paul Auster
    “I've been trying to fit everything in, trying to get to the end before it's too late, but I see now how badly I've deceived myself. Words do not allow such things. The closer you come to the end, the more there is to say. The end is only imaginary, a destination you invent to keep yourself going, but a point comes when you realize you will never get there. You might have to stop, but that is only because you have run out of time. You stop, but that does not mean you have come to an end.”
    Paul Auster, In the Country of Last Things

  • #30
    Paul Auster
    “The pictures do not lie, but neither do they tell the whole story. They are merely a record of time passing, the outward evidence.”
    Paul Auster, Travels in the Scriptorium



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