Liese > Liese's Quotes

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  • #1
    Dolly Alderton
    “Because I am enough. My heart is enough. The stories and the sentences twisting around my mind are enough. I am fizzing and frothing and buzzing and exploding. I'm bubbling over and burning up. My early-morning walks and my late-night baths are enough. My loud laugh at the pub is enough. My piercing whistle, my singing in the shower, my double-jointed toes are enough. I am a just-pulled pint with a good, frothy head on it. I am my own universe; a galaxy; a solar system. I am the warm-up act, the main event, and the backing singers. And if this is it, if this is all there is- just me and the trees and the sky and the seas- I know now that that's enough.”
    Dolly Alderton, Everything I Know About Love

  • #2
    Dolly Alderton
    “Life is a wonderful, mesmerizing, magical, fun, silly thing. And humans are astounding. We all know we’re going to die, and yet we still live. We shout and curse and care when the full bin bag breaks, yet with every minute that passes we edge closer to the end. We marvel at a nectarine sunset over the M25 or the smell of a baby’s head or the efficiency of flat-pack furniture, even though we know that everyone we love will cease to exist one day. I don’t know how we do it.”
    Dolly Alderton, Everything I Know About Love

  • #3
    Fredrik Backman
    “We're just strangers passing each other, your anxieties briefly brushing against mine as the fibers of our coats touch momentarily on a crowded sidewalk somewhere. We never really know what to do to each other, with each other, for each other.”
    Fredrik Backman, Anxious People

  • #4
    Fredrik Backman
    “But when you get home this evening, when this day is over and the night takes us, allow yourself a deep breath. Because we made it through this day as well.

    There'll be another one along tomorrow.”
    Fredrik Backman, Anxious People

  • #5
    Matt Haig
    “The only way to learn is to live.”
    Matt Haig, The Midnight Library

  • #6
    Matt Haig
    “Never underestimate the big importance of small things”
    Matt Haig, The Midnight Library

  • #7
    Matt Haig
    “You’re overthinking it.’ ‘I have anxiety. I have no other type of thinking available.”
    Matt Haig, The Midnight Library

  • #8
    Matt Haig
    “The key is in accepting your thoughts, all of them, even the bad ones. Accept thoughts, but don’t become them. Understand, for instance, that having a sad thought, even having a continual succession of sad thoughts, is not the same as being a sad person. You can walk through a storm and feel the wind but you know you are not the wind.”
    Matt Haig, Reasons to Stay Alive

  • #9
    R.F. Kuang
    “Reading lets us live in someone else’s shoes. Literature builds bridges; it makes our world larger, not smaller.”
    R.F. Kuang, Yellowface

  • #10
    R.F. Kuang
    “Reading should be an enjoyable experience, not a chore.”
    R.F. Kuang, Yellowface

  • #11
    Matt Haig
    “To experience beauty on Earth, you needed to experience pain and to know mortality. That is why so much that is beautiful on this planet has to do with time passing and the Earth turning. Which might also explain why to look at such natural beauty was to also feel sadness and a craving for a life unlived.”
    Matt Haig, The Humans

  • #12
    Matt Haig
    “Laughter, along with madness, seemed to be the only way out, the emergency exit for humans.”
    Matt Haig, The Humans

  • #13
    Matt Haig
    “Tragedy is just comedy that hasn’t come to fruition. One day we will laugh at this. We will laugh at everything.”
    Matt Haig, The Humans

  • #14
    Matt Haig
    “I felt the beautiful melancholy of being human, captured perfectly in the setting of a sun. Because, as with a sunset, to be human was to be in-between things; a day, bursting with desperate colour as it headed irreversibly towards night.”
    Matt Haig, The Humans

  • #15
    Fredrik Backman
    “To love someone is like moving into a house," Sonja used to say. "At first you fall in love in everything new, you wonder every morning that this is one's own, as if they are afraid that someone will suddenly come tumbling through the door and say that there has been a serious mistake and that it simply was not meant to would live so fine. But as the years go by, the facade worn, the wood cracks here and there, and you start to love this house not so much for all the ways it is perfect in that for all the ways it is not. You become familiar with all its nooks and crannies. How to avoid that the key gets stuck in the lock if it is cold outside. Which floorboards have some give when you step on them, and exactly how to open the doors for them not to creak. That's it, all the little secrets that make it your home.”
    Fredrik Backman, A Man Called Ove



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