Chiara > Chiara's Quotes

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  • #1
    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

  • #2
    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

  • #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
    “Stories only happen to those who are able to tell them.”
    Paul Auster

  • #5
    Paul Auster
    “It seems to me that I will always be happy in the place where I am not.”
    Paul Auster

  • #6
    Paul Auster
    “And that's why books are never going to die. It's impossible. It's the only time we really go into the mind of a stranger, and we find our common humanity doing this. So the book doesn't only belong to the writer, it belongs to the reader as well, and then together you make it what it is.”
    Paul Auster

  • #7
    Paul Auster
    “You're too good for this world, and because of that the world will eventually crush you.”
    Paul Auster, Invisible

  • #8
    Paul Auster
    “Libraries aren't in the real world, after all. They're places apart, sanctuaries of pure thought. In this way I can go on living on the moon for the rest of my life.”
    paul auster

  • #9
    Paul Auster
    “Each time he took a walk, he felt as though he were leaving himself behind, and by giving himself up to the movement of the streets, by reducing himself to a seeing eye, he was able to escape the obligation to think, and this, more than anything else, brought him a measure of peace, a salutary emptiness within...By wandering aimlessly, all places became equal and it no longer mattered where he was. On his best walks he was able to feel that he was nowhere. And this, finally was all he ever asked of things: to be nowhere.”
    Paul Auster, City of Glass

  • #10
    Paul Auster
    “It always stimulates me to discover new examples of my own prejudice and stupidity, to realize that I don't know half as much as I think I do.”
    Paul Auster, Oracle Night

  • #11
    Paul Auster
    “The truth of the story lies in the details.”
    Paul Auster, The Brooklyn Follies

  • #12
    Paul Auster
    “Every life is inexplicable, I kept telling myself. No matter how many facts are told, no matter how many details are given, the essential thing resists telling. To say that so and so was born here and went there, that he did this and did that, that he married this woman and had these children, that he lived, that he died, that he left behind these books or this battle or that bridge – none of that tells us very much.”
    Paul Auster, The New York Trilogy

  • #13
    Paul Auster
    “You can't put your feet on the ground until you've touched the sky.”
    Paul Auster

  • #14
    Paul Auster
    “Memory is the space in which a thing happens for a second time.”
    Paul Auster

  • #15
    Paul Auster
    “The story is not in the words; it's in the struggle.”
    Paul Auster, The New York Trilogy

  • #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
    “We have missed him in the sunshine, in the storm, in the twilight, ever since. ”
    Paul Auster, Man in the Dark

  • #20
    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

  • #21
    Paul Auster
    “Writing is a solitary business. It takes over your life. In some sense, a writer has no life of his own. Even when he’s there, he’s not really there.”
    Paul Auster, The New York Trilogy

  • #22
    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

  • #23
    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

  • #24
    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

  • #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
    “Nothing lasts, you see, not even the thoughts inside you. And you musn't
    waste your time looking for them. Once a thing is gone, that is the end of it.”
    Paul Auster, In the Country of Last Things

  • #27
    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

  • #28
    Paul Auster
    “We find ourselves only by looking to what we’re not.”
    Paul Auster, Moon Palace

  • #29
    Paul Auster
    “It was. It will never be again. Remember.”
    Paul Auster, The Invention of Solitude

  • #30
    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



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