day > day's Quotes

Showing 1-30 of 372
« previous 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 12 13
sort by

  • #1
    Erika Swyler
    “Once you’ve held a book and really loved it, you forever remember the feel of it, its specific weight, the way it sits in your hand.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #2
    Erika Swyler
    “Perhaps the book opened a door; books have a way of causing ripples.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #3
    Erika Swyler
    “We carry our families like anchors, rooting us in storms, making sure we never drift from where and who we are. We carry our families within us the way we carry our breath underwater, keeping us afloat, keeping us alive.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #4
    Erika Swyler
    “If it’s possible to have a reading hangover, I have one.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #5
    Erika Swyler
    “Because there are things you do for people you’ve known your whole life. You let them save you, you put them in your books, and you let each other begin again, clean.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #6
    Erika Swyler
    “Hard thoughts are held in small words.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #7
    Erika Swyler
    “Why the hell don't people understand there are some things you don't talk about? You keep it to yourself so you hurt fewer people. You're supposed to pay with guilt. Guilt is penance.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #8
    Erika Swyler
    “Once you’ve held a book and really loved it, you forever remember the feel of it, its specific weight, the way it sits in your hand. My thumb knows the grain of this book’s leather, the dry dust of red rot that’s crept up its spine, each waving leaf of every page that holds a little secret or one of Peabody’s flourishes. A librarian remembers the particular scent of glue and dust, and if we’re so lucky—and I was—the smell of parchment, a quiet tanginess, softer than wood pulp or cotton rag. We would bury ourselves in books until flesh and paper became one and ink and blood at last ran together. So maybe my hand does clench too tightly to the spine. I may never again hold another book this old, or one with such a whisper of me in it.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #9
    Erika Swyler
    “How good it was that people, like houses, had frames and that those frames could be so beautiful.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation
    tags: beauty

  • #10
    Erika Swyler
    “Something is very wrong. What began as a passing fascination with the book has turned into something darker,”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #11
    Erika Swyler
    “Half the charm in old books is the marks of living they acquire;”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #12
    Erika Swyler
    “I need to get into the water, to clear my head.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #13
    Erika Swyler
    “Even in a sea of names, a drowning mermaid has a way of standing out.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #14
    Erika Swyler
    “With life blooming inside her, the water answered her questions with a whispered yes, and part of her knew home. In a tidal river on the Virginia coast she encountered a peculiar creature that scuttled the riverbed. She held it up and examined the graceful curve of its shell, its neat spike of a tail, and spidery feet that kicked and scratched at the air as she cradled it in her palm. A wonder just for her, she thought. The flickering of a child inside her laughed. Evangeline”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #15
    Erika Swyler
    “She is half a soul, hungry or another...

    The girl, she may not know, but she will drink your soul. She cannot help it. Half a soul will kill to be whole.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #16
    Erika Swyler
    “People spend their entire lives moving back and forth over the same water, moving but staying.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #17
    Erika Swyler
    “You killed him too. It just took longer.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #18
    Erika Swyler
    “I think sometimes it is difficult to look after ourselves,' he said, thoughtfully. 'We look to friends to do it for us.”
    Erika Swyler, The Book of Speculation

  • #19
    Caitlin  Starling
    “It terrifies me. But you don’t, and I can’t leave the thought of you alone.”
    Caitlin Starling, The Death of Jane Lawrence

  • #20
    Caitlin  Starling
    “I can think of little else,” he said, finally taking the ring from her and gently, so gently, slipping it onto her finger. “After a just a few days, I find I’ve completely lost my mind over you.”
    Caitlin Starling, The Death of Jane Lawrence

  • #21
    Caitlin  Starling
    “If the practitioner knows that magic is possible, then the practitioner can change the rules by which the world functions. But that knowing extends beyond belief, extends beyond mere acceptance. Magic must be a part of the practitioner’s every waking moment. It is an altered state of being.”
    Caitlin Starling, The Death of Jane Lawrence

  • #22
    Caitlin  Starling
    “But the logic is circular. Because the ghosts exist, you’ve proven Augustine can work magic. Because he can work magic, he is the reason for the ghosts. What if it’s something else?”
    Caitlin Starling, The Death of Jane Lawrence

  • #23
    Caitlin  Starling
    “The premise of the working of magic,” Dr. Nizamiev said, “is first and foremost that the practitioner believes—that she knows—that it is possible.”
    Caitlin Starling, The Death of Jane Lawrence

  • #24
    Caitlin  Starling
    “I’ll remain,”
    Caitlin Starling, The Death of Jane Lawrence

  • #25
    Caitlin  Starling
    “Life was worth more than a sum on a page, and yet it was only worth a sum on a page.”
    Caitlin Starling, The Death of Jane Lawrence

  • #26
    Caitlin  Starling
    “A magician gets what she asks for, whether she meant to ask for it or not.”
    Caitlin Starling, The Death of Jane Lawrence

  • #27
    Caitlin  Starling
    “It was not so hard, to pretend for a fixed duration; it was only eternity that she could not bear”
    Caitlin Starling, The Death of Jane Lawrence

  • #28
    Caitlin  Starling
    “What could he have been, if he’d hadn’t confused self-loathing with humility?”
    Caitlin Starling, The Death of Jane Lawrence

  • #29
    Caitlin  Starling
    “Open up to the positive emotions. Focus on them,” he said. “This is the best part. It’s like having a sun inside you. Let it light you up.” “What did you call it? Feeling alive?” He stood. “Alive, yes. It thrives off itself. You’re alive, and they’re alive, and so you feel them being alive as if it were yourself, and it doubles. It’s intoxicating.”
    Caitlin Starling, The Death of Jane Lawrence

  • #30
    Caitlin  Starling
    “The paradox of medicine: pain and relief, life and death.”
    Caitlin Starling, The Death of Jane Lawrence



Rss
« previous 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 12 13