Corrin > Corrin's Quotes

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  • #1
    Hank Green
    “Humanity is good. Some people are terrible and broken, but humanity is good. I believe that.”
    Hank Green

  • #2
    Sarah J. Maas
    “There are good days and hard days for me—even now. Don’t let the hard days win.”
    Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury

  • #3
    Nina LaCour
    “I thought that it was more likely the opposite. I must have shut grief out. Found it in books. Cried over fiction instead of the truth. The truth was unconfined, unadorned. There was no poetic language to it, no yellow butterflies, no epic floods. There wasn't a town trapped underwater or generations of men with the same name destined to make the same mistakes. The truth was vast enough to drown in.”
    Nina LaCour, We Are Okay

  • #4
    Gillian Flynn
    “It’s a very difficult era in which to be a person, just a real, actual person, instead of a collection of personality traits selected from an endless Automat of characters.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #5
    R. Eric Thomas
    “You say you want a happy ending, but neither of those words is really what you're searching for. For instance, you will not live to see a just world. But you will live to see acts of justice.”
    R. Eric Thomas, Here for It; Or, How to Save Your Soul in America: Essays

  • #6
    “But I am not impressed with America’s progress. I am not impressed that slavery was abolished or that Jim Crow ended. I feel no need to pat America on its back for these “achievements.” This is how it always should have been. Many call it progress, but I do not consider it praiseworthy that only within the last generation did America reach the baseline for human decency. As comedian Chris Rock says, I suppose these things were progress for white people, but damn. I hope there is progress I can sincerely applaud on the horizon. Because the extrajudicial killing of Black people is still too familiar. Because the racist rhetoric that Black people are lazier, more criminal, more undeserving than white people is still too familiar. Because the locking up of a disproportionate number of Black bodies is still too familiar. Because the beating of Black people in the streets is still too familiar. History is collapsing on itself once again.”
    Austin Channing Brown, I'm Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made for Whiteness

  • #7
    “This is the shadow of hope. Knowing that we may never see the realization of our dreams, and yet still showing up.”
    Austin Channing Brown, I'm Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made for Whiteness

  • #8
    “Anger is not inherently destructive. My anger can be a force for good. My anger can be creative and imaginative, seeing a better world that doesn’t yet exist. It can fuel a righteous movement toward justice and freedom.”
    Austin Channing Brown, I'm Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made for Whiteness

  • #9
    Shirley Jackson
    “Am I walking toward something I should be running away from?”
    Shirley Jackson, The Haunting of Hill House

  • #10
    Carmen Maria Machado
    “In this way, the Dream House was a haunted house. You were the sudden, inadvertent occupant of a place where bad things had happened. And then it occurs to you one day, standing in the living room, that you are this house's ghost: you are the one wandering from room to room with no purpose, gaping at the moving boxes that are never unpacked, never certain what you're supposed to do. After all, you don't need to die to leave a mark of psychic pain. If anyone is living in the Dream House now, he or she might be seeing the echo of you.”
    Carmen Maria Machado, In the Dream House

  • #11
    Carmen Maria Machado
    “You tried to tell your story to people who didn't know how to listen.”
    Carmen Maria Machado, In the Dream House

  • #12
    Suzanne Collins
    “Public opinion is driven by emotion. People have an emotional response to something, then they come up with an argument for why it logically makes sense.”
    Suzanne Collins, Sunrise on the Reaping



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