Avery > Avery's Quotes

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  • #1
    Margaret Atwood
    “When they're gone out of his head, these words, they'll be gone, everywhere, forever. As if they had never been.”
    Margaret Atwood, Oryx and Crake
    tags: words

  • #2
    Aldous Huxley
    “But I don't want comfort. I want God, I want poetry, I want real danger, I want freedom, I want goodness. I want sin.”
    Aldous Huxley, Brave New World

  • #3
    Plato
    “I am the wisest man alive, for I know one thing, and that is that I know nothing.”
    Plato, The Republic

  • #4
    Margaret Atwood
    “When any civilization is dust and ashes," he said, "art is all that's left over. Images, words, music. Imaginative structures. Meaning—human meaning, that is—is defined by them. You have to admit that.”
    Margaret Atwood, Oryx and Crake

  • #5
    Aldous Huxley
    “Did you ever feel, as though you had something inside you that was only waiting for you to give it a chance to come out? Some sort of extra power that you aren't using - you know, like all the water that goes down the falls instead of through the turbines?”
    Aldous Huxley, Brave New World

  • #6
    Margaret Atwood
    “We understand more than we know.”
    Margaret Atwood, Oryx and Crake

  • #7
    Margaret Atwood
    “There's something to be said for hunger: at least it lets you know you're still alive.”
    Margaret Atwood, Oryx and Crake

  • #8
    Margaret Atwood
    “Immortality,' said Crake, ' is a concept. If you take 'mortality' as being, not death, but the foreknowledge of it and the fear of it, then 'immortality' is the absence of such fear. Babies are immortal. Edit out the fear, and you'll be...”
    Margaret Atwood, Oryx and Crake

  • #9
    Margaret Atwood
    “You can’t buy it, but it has a price,” said Oryx. “Everything has a price.”
    Margaret Atwood, Oryx and Crake

  • #10
    Margaret Atwood
    “He doesn't know which is worse, a past he can't regain or a present that will destroy him if he looks at it too clearly. Then there's the future. Sheer vertigo.”
    Margaret Atwood, Oryx and Crake

  • #11
    Margaret Atwood
    “Nature is to zoos as God is to churches.”
    Margaret Atwood, Oryx and Crake

  • #12
    Aldous Huxley
    “And that," put in the Director sententiously, "that is the secret of happiness and virtue — liking what you've got to do. All conditioning aims at that: making people like their unescapable social destiny.”
    Aldous Huxley, Brave New World

  • #13
    Christopher Hitchens
    “We can always be sure of one thing—that the messengers of discomfort and sacrifice will be stoned and pelted by those who wish to preserve at all costs their own contentment. This is not a lesson that is confined to the Testaments.”
    Christopher Hitchens, Love, Poverty, and War: Journeys and Essays

  • #14
    Zhuangzi
    “The wise man knows that it is better to sit on the banks of a remote mountain stream than to be emperor of the whole world.”
    Zhuangzi

  • #15
    Yōko Ogawa
    “Solving a problem for which you know there’s an answer is like climbing a mountain with a guide, along a trail someone else has laid. In mathematics, the truth is somewhere out there in a place no one knows, beyond all the beaten paths. And it’s not always at the top of the mountain. It might be in a crack on the smoothest cliff or somewhere deep in the valley.”
    Yoko Ogawa, The Housekeeper and the Professor

  • #16
    Yōko Ogawa
    “Still, being alone doesn't mean you have to be miserable. In that sense it's different from losing something. You've still got yourself, even if you lose everything else. You've got to have faith in yourself and not get down just because you're on your own.”
    Yoko Ogawa, The Diving Pool: Three Novellas

  • #17
    Yōko Ogawa
    “A problem isn't finished just because you've found the right answer.”
    Yoko Ogawa, The Housekeeper and the Professor

  • #18
    Yōko Ogawa
    “When we grow up, we find ways to hide our anxieties, our loneliness, our fear and sorrow. But children hide nothing, putting everything into their tears, which they spread liberally about for the whole world to see.”
    Yoko Ogawa, The Diving Pool: Three Novellas

  • #19
    Yōko Ogawa
    “Men who start by burning books end by burning other men,”
    Yōko Ogawa, The Memory Police



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