Alp Beck > Alp's Quotes

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  • #1
    Kate Atkinson
    “Bridget wouldn’t let Trixie come to Mrs. Dodds’s house, she said she would never hear the end of it. “She doesn’t believe in dogs,” Bridget said. “Dogs are hardly an article of faith,” Sylvie said.”
    Kate Atkinson, Life After Life

  • #2
    Gabino Iglesias
    “What people with money don’t understand is that most poor people’s problems can be solved with money. There are problems that won’t go away no matter how many bills you throw at them, but for people like me, for folks whose nightmares have names like hunger and eviction, money is a wonderful thing that can make tribulations disappear in a matter of seconds.”
    Gabino Iglesias, The Devil Takes You Home

  • #3
    John Howard Griffin
    “We need a conversion of morals,” the elderly man said. “Not just superficially, but profoundly. And in both races. We need a great saint - some enlightened common sense. Otherwise, we’ll never have the right answers when the pressure groups - those racists, super-patriots, whatever you want to call them - tag every move toward racial justice as communist-inspired, Zionist-inspired, Illuminati-inspired, Satan-inspired … part of some secret conspiracy to overthrow the Christian civilization.”
    John Howard Griffin, Black Like Me

  • #4
    John Howard Griffin
    “I think the general public has never understood the “special” kind of life that civil rights advocates had to lead in those years. Racists showed high ingenuity in developing schemes to destroy a man’s reputation as a means of nullifying his work. For example, many civil rights advocates, white and black, traveled and lectured extensively. In the early days, a number of effective men were entrapped in situations that either damaged them personally or ruined their reputations. Those who were with lecture bureaus were particularly vulnerable. Anyone could write the lecture bureau for the travel schedule of its speakers. If a man made a long flight to fulfill a speaking engagement, the chances were at least fair that when he landed at the distant airport he might make use of the rest room. It would be enough to plant one or two men in the rest room and accuse him of some indecency. This happened to a Mississippi white attorney in a case that was given maximum publicity in white newspapers. He had to fly to Los Angeles for an appearance. His travel schedule was known. At the end of this flight he went to the men’s rest room, and when he emerged, he was arrested because two men claimed he had indecently exposed himself. He was tried in absentia and found guilty in Mississippi. He was publicly labeled a pervert and his career in civil rights was effectively quashed.”
    John Howard Griffin, Black Like Me

  • #5
    John Howard Griffin
    “There are thousands of kinds of injustice but there is only one kind of justice - equal justice for all. To call for a little more justice, or a moderately gradual sort of justice, is to call for no justice. That is a simple truth.”
    John Howard Griffin, Black Like Me

  • #6
    Chuck Palahniuk
    “Everyone should use three types of communication. Three parts description. Two parts instruction. One part onomatopoeia. Mix to taste.”
    Chuck Palahniuk, Consider This: Moments in My Writing Life After Which Everything Was Different

  • #7
    Chuck Palahniuk
    “I’d make you list at least fifty hand signals. That way you’d always, always be aware of the variety of gestures you can insert into dialogue.”
    Chuck Palahniuk, Consider This: Moments in My Writing Life After Which Everything Was Different

  • #8
    Chuck Palahniuk
    “Create tension by pitting your character’s gestures against his or her words.”
    Chuck Palahniuk, Consider This: Moments in My Writing Life After Which Everything Was Different

  • #9
    Chuck Palahniuk
    “Second, use attribution to create a beat of…nothing. A bland, empty moment like the silence between notes in music. The theory is that readers don’t subvocalize “he said.” They visually leap over it, landing harder on the dialogue that follows. For example: “Nurse,” he said, “hurry and get me a fresh pancreas.”
    Chuck Palahniuk, Consider This: Moments in My Writing Life After Which Everything Was Different

  • #10
    Chuck Palahniuk
    “you should be combining gesture, action, and expression with your dialogue.”
    Chuck Palahniuk, Consider This: Moments in My Writing Life After Which Everything Was Different

  • #11
    Alp Beck
    “The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don't have any. Alice Walker”
    Alp Beck

  • #12
    Tananarive Due
    “Even standing side by side with Redbone, Robert felt miles away from him. He had never felt that way about a friend. And wasn’t Redbone Blue’s friend too? This new, harder kind of friendship cut through his skin like Haddock’s whip.”
    Tananarive Due, The Reformatory

  • #13
    Lisa Jewell
    “She feels a sense of unease pass through her as she sees Giovanni head to the cocktail cabinet for a second bottle of vodka, the careless, loose-wristed glugging into guests’ glasses, the glaze across Nathan’s eyes, the loudness of him, the babble of bullshit, the overloud laugh, and she knows already that this will be one of those nights and she doesn’t want to be that wife, the purse-lipped, stick-up-the-butt wife, the wife who can’t relax and can’t have fun and spoils it for everyone else. She wants to down tequila shots and sing and dance and laugh like a drain. But she can’t take on that role because Nathan has already staked his claim on it and one of them has to remain sentient and together; one of them has to be the grown-up.”
    Lisa Jewell, None of This Is True

  • #14
    David Zucker
    “Then in March 1993, everything changed. My one-year-old son, Charlie, had his first seizure. There’s absolutely nothing funny about being the parent of a child with uncontrolled epilepsy. Nothing. After a year of daily seizures, drugs, and a brain surgery, I learned that the cure for Charlie’s epilepsy, the ketogenic diet—a high fat, no sugar, limited protein diet—had been hiding in plain sight for, by then, over seventy years. And despite the diet’s being well documented in medical texts, none of the half-dozen pediatric neurologists we had taken Charlie to see had mentioned a word about it. I found out on my own at a medical library. It was life altering—not just for Charlie and my family, but for tens of thousands like us. Turns out there are powerful forces at work within our health care system that don’t necessarily prioritize good health. For decades, physicians have barely been taught diet therapy or even nutrition in medical school. The pharmaceutical, medical device, and sugar industries make hundreds of billions every year on anti-epileptic drugs and processed foods—but not a nickel if we change what we eat. The cardiology community and American Heart Association demonize fat based on flawed science. Hospitals profit from tests and procedures, but again no money from diet therapy. There is a world epilepsy population of over sixty million people. Most of those people begin having their seizures as children, and only a minuscule percentage ever find out about ketogenic diet therapies. When I realized that 99 percent of what had happened to Charlie and my family was unnecessary, and that there were millions of families worldwide in the same situation, I needed to try to do something. Nancy and I began the Charlie Foundation (charliefoundation.org) in 1994 in order to facilitate research and get the word directly to those who would benefit. Among the high points were countless articles, a couple appearances of Charlie’s story on Dateline NBC, and a movie I produced and directed about another family whose child’s epilepsy had been cured by the ketogenic diet starring Meryl Streep titled First Do No Harm (1997). Today, of course, the diet permeates social media. When we started, there was one hospital in the world offering ketogenic diet therapy. Today, there are 250. Equally important, word about the efficacy of the ketogenic diet for epilepsy spread within the scientific community. In 1995, we hosted the first of many scientific global symposia focused on the diet. As research into its mechanisms and applications has spiked, incredibly the professional communities have found the same metabolic pathway that is triggered by the ketogenic diet to reduce seizures has also been found to benefit Alzheimer’s disease, ALS, severe psychiatric disorders, traumatic brain injury, and even some cancers. I”
    David Zucker, Surely You Can't Be Serious: The True Story of Airplane!

  • #15
    Shere Hite
    “landmark victories such as the 1995 United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Women, signed by 140 countries, which proclaims a woman’s autonomy over her own body.”
    Shere Hite, The Hite Report: A Nationwide Study of Female Sexuality

  • #16
    “When it came to trading insults Tallulah Bankhead was Bette’s equal: ‘Don’t think I don’t know who’s been spreading gossip about me. After all the nice things I’ve said about that hag. When I get hold of her, I’ll tear out every hair of her moustache! Bette and I are very good friends. There’s nothing I wouldn’t say to her face, both of them.”
    Alan Royle, Hollywood The Skeletons Are Out!: Over 1,200 direct quotes by actors and directors about themselves, their colleagues and their films

  • #17
    Ray Bradbury
    “I’ve followed the advice I’ve shared with other writers over the years: Jump off the cliff and build your wings on the way down.”
    Ray Bradbury, Bradbury Stories: 100 of His Most Celebrated Tales

  • #18
    Charles Barouch
    “Best friends, one afire with hope, the other both weary and wary.”
    Charles Barouch, ENDLESS HUNGER

  • #19
    “Weird unconscious emotional math was sprouting up in their once-unbreakable bond like poison oak.”
    Elizabeth Rose Quinn, Follow Me

  • #20
    “Her eyes stole a glance at the man in the front seat, who hadn’t said a word but whose presence loomed over them both like carbon monoxide.”
    Elizabeth Rose Quinn, Follow Me

  • #21
    “Adrienne couldn’t stop the words pouring out of her. “God, you cry so much you’re basically amphibious now—constantly slick with tears, glistening with weakness.”
    Elizabeth Rose Quinn, Follow Me

  • #22
    “Adrienne tried to swallow her frustration. This was like attempting to get a witness statement from a school of goldfish.”
    Elizabeth Rose Quinn, Follow Me

  • #23
    Stephen  King
    “Late eighties, yet hale and healthy!” Holly wonders if he’s having a kind of Alzheimer’s-induced dream, or if he’s just batpoop out of his mind. Maybe it’s both. She just saw the way they came downstairs, step by careful, hesitating step. Like human Ming vases.”
    Stephen King, Holly

  • #24
    Rebecca Baum
    “swaddled in cottony apathy.”
    Rebecca Baum, The Brood



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