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Steve > Steve's Quotes

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  • #1
    Kevin Sampson
    “Where's my life gone? Where's it going? Looking across the grassy marshland to Flint and up the coast to Point Of Air, I start to wonder what all those poor fuckers in Wales are doing with their lives. Screwing? Sleeping in? Debating whether to take breakfast in bed to their broken fathers? Unlikely. They're probably doing what the gilded folk of Hollywood are doing, or Kowloon or Port Elizabeth. Worrying. Worrying about getting old, or about work, or about money, or about their boyfriend, mistress, lover, house, health, future. Life is shit. There is no fucking point to any of it. Not now that we've evolved past the survival stage. Maybe we used to live to hunt to kill to eat to live another day. Now we just kill time in as many sophisticated ways as possible. Pointless jobs. Pointless lives. Work. Television. Football.”
    Kevin Sampson, Awaydays

  • #2
    Sophie Scholl
    “The sun still shines.”
    Sophie Scholl

  • #3
    I like trains. I like their rhythm, and I like the freedom of being suspended
    “I like trains. I like their rhythm, and I like the freedom of being suspended between two places, all anxieties of purpose taken care of: for this moment I know where I am going.”
    Anna Funder, Stasiland: Stories from Behind the Berlin Wall

  • #4
    Kevin Sampson
    “She was not somebody who'd assume other people would want to hear about her unhappiness.”
    Kevin Sampson, Powder

  • #5
    Anna Funder
    “one does not remember one’s own pain. It is the suffering of others that undoes us”
    Anna Funder, All That I Am

  • #6
    Kevin Sampson
    “Things were good. He had things to look forward to. That, for now, was to be his definition of living - to always have a thing to look forward to.”
    Kevin Sampson, Powder

  • #7
    Anna Funder
    “I remember learning German - so beautiful, so strange - at school in Australia on the other side of the earth. My family was nonplussed about me learning such an odd, ugly language and, though of course too sophisticated to say it, the language of the enemy. But I liked the sticklebrick nature of it, building long supple words by putting short ones together. Things could be brought into being that had no name in English - Weltanschauung, Schadenfreude, sippenhaft, Sonderweg, Scheissfreundlichkeit, Vergangenheitsbewältigung.”
    Anna Funder, Stasiland: Stories from Behind the Berlin Wall



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