Glennie > Glennie's Quotes

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  • #1
    Madeline Miller
    “In the darkness, two shadows, reaching through the hopeless, heavy dusk. Their hands meet, and light spills in a flood like a hundred golden urns pouring out of the sun.”
    Madeline Miller, The Song of Achilles

  • #2
    Leigh Bardugo
    “They had an ordinary life, full of ordinary things—if love can ever be called that.”
    Leigh Bardugo, Ruin and Rising

  • #3
    Madeline Miller
    “He showed me his scars, and in return he let me pretend that I had none.”
    Madeline Miller, Circe

  • #4
    Madeline Miller
    “But in a solitary life, there are rare moments when another soul dips near yours, as stars once a year brush the earth. Such a constellation was he to me.”
    Madeline Miller, Circe

  • #5
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Nina understood, maybe for the first time, that letting people love you and care for you is part of how you love and care for them.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Malibu Rising

  • #6
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “How were you supposed to change- in ways both big and small- when your family was always there to remind you of exactly the person you apparently signed an ironclad contract to be?”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Malibu Rising

  • #7
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “It was as if June had given her a box—as if every parent gives their children a box—full of the things they carried. June had given her children this box packed to the brim with her own experiences, her own treasures and heartbreaks. Her own guilts and pleasures, triumphs and losses, values and biases, duties and sorrows. And Nina had been carrying around this box her whole life, feeling the full weight of it. But it was not, Nina saw just then, her job to carry the full box. Her job was to sort through the box. To decide what to keep, and to put the rest down. She had to choose what, of the things she inherited from the people who came before her, she wanted to bring forward. And what, of the past, she wanted to leave behind.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Malibu Rising

  • #8
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Don't ignore half of me so you can fit me into a box. Don't do that.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

  • #9
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “I’m under absolutely no obligation to make sense to you.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

  • #10
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Heartbreak is a loss. Divorce is a piece of paper.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

  • #11
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “You can be sorry about something and not regret it,” Evelyn says.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

  • #12
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “She always made sure the bad was outweighed by so much good. I...well, I didn't do that for her. I made it fifty-fifty. Which is about the cruelest thing you can do to someone you love, give them just enough good to make them stick through a hell of a lot of bad.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

  • #13
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “I spent half my time loving her and the other half hiding how much I loved her.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

  • #14
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “No one is just a victim or a victor. Everyone is somewhere in between. People who go around casting themselves as one or the other are not only kidding themselves, but they’re also painfully unoriginal.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

  • #15
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “My mother raised me to be polite, to be demure. I have long operated under the idea that civility is subservience. But it hasn't gotten me very far, that type of kindness. The world respects people who think they should be running it.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

  • #16
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “I loved you so much that I thought you were the meaning of my life....I thought that people were put on earth to find other people, and I was put here to find you. To find you and touch your skin and smell your breath and hear all your thoughts. But I don't want to be meant for someone like you.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

  • #17
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “It is two A.M., and you are tired. You miss the love of your life. You want to go home. You would rather be with her, in bed, hearing the light buzz of her snoring, watching her sleep, than be here.
    [...]
    You imagine a world where the two of you can go out to dinner together on a Saturday night and no one thinks twice about it. It makes you want to cry, the simplicity of it, the smallness of it. You have worked so hard for a life so grand. And now all you want are the smallest freedoms. The daily peace of loving plainly.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

  • #18
    Pema Chödrön
    “NOT CAUSING HARM obviously includes not killing or robbing or lying to people. It also includes not being aggressive—not being aggressive with our actions, our speech, or our minds. Learning not to cause harm to ourselves or others is a basic Buddhist teaching on the healing power of nonaggression. Not harming ourselves or others in the beginning, not harming ourselves or others in the middle, and not harming ourselves or others in the end is the basis of enlightened society.”
    Pema Chödrön, When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times

  • #19
    Pema Chödrön
    “Well-being of body is like a mountain. A lot happens on a mountain. It hails, and the winds come up, and it rains and snows. The sun gets very hot, clouds cross over, animals shit and piss on the mountain, and so do people. People leave their trash, and other people clean it up. Many things come and go on this mountain, but it just sits there. When we’ve seen ourselves completely, there’s a stillness of body that is like a mountain. We no longer get jumpy and have to scratch our noses, pull our ears, punch somebody, go running from the room, or drink ourselves into oblivion.”
    Pema Chödrön, When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times

  • #20
    Pema Chödrön
    “Practicing loving-kindness toward ourselves seems as good a way as any to start illuminating the darkness of difficult times.”
    Pema Chödrön, When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times

  • #21
    “You don’t have to have a reason to be tired. You don’t have to earn rest or comfort. You’re allowed to just be.”
    Becky Chambers, A Prayer for the Crown-Shy

  • #22
    “Well, that's the nice thing about trees," Mosscap put its hands on its hips as it looked around. "They're not going anywhere. You can take all the time you need to get to know them.”
    Becky Chambers, A Prayer for the Crown-Shy

  • #23
    “Crown shyness is so striking, don’t you think?”
    Becky Chambers, A Prayer for the Crown-Shy

  • #24
    “You keep asking why your work is not enough, and I don’t know how to answer that, because it is enough to exist in the world and marvel at it. You don’t need to justify that, or earn it. You are allowed to just live.”
    Becky Chambers, A Psalm for the Wild-Built

  • #25
    “You’re an animal, Sibling Dex. You are not separate or other. You’re an animal. And animals have no purpose. Nothing has a purpose. The world simply is. If you want to do things that are meaningful to others, fine! Good! So do I! But if I wanted to crawl into a cave and watch stalagmites with Frostfrog for the remainder of my days, that would also be both fine and good. You keep asking why your work is not enough, and I don’t know how to answer that, because it is enough to exist in the world and marvel at it. You don’t need to justify that, or earn it. You are allowed to just live. That is all most animals do.”
    Becky Chambers, A Psalm for the Wild-Built

  • #26
    Julia Armfield
    “I want to explain her in a way that would make you love her, but the problem with this is that loving is something we all do alone and through different sets of eyes.”
    Julia Armfield, Our Wives Under the Sea

  • #27
    Lily King
    “men who wrote tender, poetic sentences that tried to hide the narcissism and misogyny of their stories.”
    Lily King, Writers & Lovers

  • #28
    Julia Armfield
    “I think,” Juna says after a pause, “that the thing about losing someone isn’t the loss but the absence of afterwards. D’you know what I mean? The endlessness of that.” She looks sideways at me and sniffs. “My friends were sad, people who knew my sister were sad, but everyone moves on after a month. It’s all they can manage. It doesn’t mean they weren’t sad, just that things keep going or something, I don’t know.” She rolls her shoulder, shakes her head. “It’s hard when you look up and realise that everyone’s moved off and left you in that place by yourself. Like they’ve all gone on and you’re there still, holding on to this person you’re supposed to let go of.”
    Julia Armfield, Our Wives Under the Sea

  • #29
    Sarah Hall
    “I'm the wood in the fire. I've experienced, altered in nature. I am burnt, damaged, more resilient. A life is a bead of water on the black surface, so frail, so strong, its world incredibly held.”
    Sarah Hall, Burntcoat

  • #30
    Sarah Hall
    “I did not contact my father. He had another family; he was a stranger. I'd been raised, capably and neglectfully, by a borrowed woman and her shadow. I lay on Naomi's bed in the empty cottage, comforted by the hollow in her pillow, my face soaked. It was the beginning of grief, for every version of her.”
    Sarah Hall, Burntcoat



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