Mari > Mari's Quotes

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  • #1
    Tamsyn Muir
    “Camilla and Palamedes were loved by Nona, said Paul. Pyrrha was loved by Nona. It’s finished, it’s done. You can’t take loved away.”
    Tamsyn Muir, Nona the Ninth

  • #2
    Saou Ichikawa
    “Being able to see; being able to hold a book; being able to turn its page; being able to maintain a reading posture; being able to go to a bookshop to buy a book - I loathed the exclusionary machismo of book culture that demanded that its participants meet these five criteria of able-bodiedness. I loathed, too, the ignorant arrogance of all those self-professed book-lovers so oblivious to their privilege.”
    Saou Ichikawa, Hunchback

  • #3
    Octavia E. Butler
    “Choose your leaders
    with wisdom and forethought.
    To be led by a coward
    is to be controlled
    by all that the coward fears.
    To be led by a fool
    is to be led
    by the opportunists
    who control the fool.
    To be led by a thief
    is to offer up
    your most precious treasures
    to be stolen.
    To be led by a liar
    is to ask
    to be told lies.
    To be led by a tyrant
    is to sell yourself
    and those you love
    into slavery.”
    Octavia E. Butler, Parable of the Talents

  • #4
    Octavia E. Butler
    “Embrace diversity.
    Unite—
    Or be divided,
    robbed,
    ruled,
    killed
    By those who see you as prey.
    Embrace diversity
    Or be destroyed.”
    Octavia E. Butler, Parable of the Sower

  • #5
    Seth Dickinson
    “Yes, people had always been evil nearly as much as they had been good. Yes, happiness was rarer than suffering - that was simply a fact of mathematics; happiness required a narrow range of conditions, and suffering flourished in all the rest.
    But Falcrest was not an innocent victim of a historical inevitability. Empire required a will, a brain to move the beast, to reach out with an appetite, to see other people as the answer to that appetite, to justify the devouring of other peoples as right and necessary and good, to frame slavery and conquest as acts of grace and charity.
    Incrasticism had provided that last and most fateful technology. The capability to justify any violence in the name of an ultimate destiny, an engine to inflict misery and to claim that misery as necessary in the quest for utopia. A false science by which the races and sexes could be separated and specialized like workers in a mill. And the endless self-deceptive blind guilty quest to justify that false science, so that the suffering and the misery remained necessary.
    Falcrest had chosen empire.
    Falcrest could therefore be held responsible for its choice.
    Not all those who lived in Falcrest participated in its devourings. But all those who lived in Falcrest had benefited from them, and by encouragement or by passive acceptance they had allowed those devourings to continue.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Tyrant Baru Cormorant
    tags: 613

  • #6
    Seth Dickinson
    “Empire planted that killing tree on Kyprananoke, where the rebels dashed children dead against the trunk.
    The only answer to empire is to move the tree.
    It is not justice. But there is no such thing as justice. Only the measureless and asymbolic truth. Who prospers. Who suffers. Who lives in glory. Who dies in chains.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Tyrant Baru Cormorant

  • #7
    Seth Dickinson
    “You will know your ruin well. You will put yourself into it as you have put yourself into us, thinking that it is your will. But it is your doom that moves you thus. And your flesh will be filled with ruin, as you have come to bring ruin into us.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Tyrant Baru Cormorant
    tags: 95

  • #8
    Seth Dickinson
    “Monsters can be charming, when they know you’re watching. They have a magnetism about them.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Tyrant Baru Cormorant

  • #9
    Octavia E. Butler
    “There is no end
    To what a living world
    Will demand of you.”
    Octavia E. Butler, Parable of the Sower

  • #10
    Octavia E. Butler
    “People have the right to call themselves whatever they like. That doesn't bother me. It's other people doing the calling that bothers me.”
    Octavia E. Butler

  • #11
    Seth Dickinson
    “You cannot destroy the masters by mastering them. You destroy them by destroying.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Tyrant Baru Cormorant
    tags: 265

  • #12
    Seth Dickinson
    “Power can't be separated from its history. A choice can't be taken in isolation from its context. Power is the ability to set the terns of the riddle. To arrange the rewards and punishments for which the choice is judged.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Tyrant Baru Cormorant
    tags: 211

  • #13
    Seth Dickinson
    “A cultural misconception sustained by lurid rumor? In our great republic?”
    Seth Dickinson, The Tyrant Baru Cormorant

  • #14
    Seth Dickinson
    “Baru felt a profound empathy for her attacker. Falcrest has cut your people, cut off lips and balls and fingers and tongues, and you cannot get justice. You cannot wait for history to turn in your favor.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Tyrant Baru Cormorant

  • #15
    Seth Dickinson
    “I’m not the kind of immortal who never dies, Baru. Just the kind who lives forever.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Tyrant Baru Cormorant

  • #16
    Seth Dickinson
    “The power was in the Throne behind the throne.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Tyrant Baru Cormorant

  • #17
    Gillian Flynn
    “A child weaned on poison considers harm a comfort.”
    Gillian Flynn, Sharp Objects
    tags: dark

  • #18
    Gillian Flynn
    “I was not a lovable child, and I'd grown into a deeply unlovable adult. Draw a picture of my soul, and it'd be a scribble with fangs.”
    Gillian Flynn, Dark Places

  • #19
    Gillian Flynn
    “Sometimes I think illness sits inside every woman, waiting for the right moment to bloom. I have known so many sick women all my life. Women with chronic pain, with ever-gestating diseases. Women with conditions. Men, sure, they have bone snaps, they have backaches, they have a surgery or two, yank out a tonsil, insert a shiny plastic hip. Women get consumed.”
    Gillian Flynn, Sharp Objects

  • #20
    Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
    “I was required to exchange chimeras of boundless grandeur for realities of little worth.”
    Mary Shelley, Frankenstein

  • #21
    Tamsyn Muir
    “My whole life, yes. Yes, forever, yes. Life is too short and love is too long.”
    Tamsyn Muir, Nona the Ninth

  • #22
    Siddharth Kara
    “Our daily lives are powered by a human and environmental catastrophe in the Congo.”
    Siddharth Kara, Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives

  • #23
    Seth Dickinson
    “This is the truth. You will know because it hurts.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Traitor Baru Cormorant

  • #24
    Seth Dickinson
    “Your error is fundamental to the human psyche: you have allowed yourself to believe that others are mechanisms, static and solvable, whereas you are an agent.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Traitor Baru Cormorant

  • #25
    Seth Dickinson
    “Good-bye, she thinks. Good-bye, kuye lam. I will write your name in the ruin of them. I will paint you across history in the color of their blood.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Traitor Baru Cormorant

  • #26
    Seth Dickinson
    “Every moment is an edict spoken by its past. The past is the real tyranny.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Traitor Baru Cormorant

  • #27
    Seth Dickinson
    “No living thing ever defeated Tain Hu in battle. Only the tide could fight her. Only the moon and the sea together could bring her down.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Monster Baru Cormorant

  • #28
    Seth Dickinson
    “War is a way to kill those who least deserve death, and enrich those who least deserve life.”
    Seth Dickinson, The Monster Baru Cormorant
    tags: war

  • #29
    “I can't imagine what kind of pain you must have been suffering.
    Nor can I understand the depths of whatever sin you have commited.
    I cannot forgive you. But even so, I will always love you.”
    Uketsu, Strange Pictures

  • #30
    Alexandra Horowitz
    “Pump changed my own umwelt. Walking through the world with her, watching her reactions, I began to imagine her experience. My enjoyment of a narrow winding path in a shady forest, lined with low bushes and grasses, comes in part from seeing how Pump enjoyed it: the cool of the shade, of course, but also the pathiness, allowing her to zoom along unchecked, stopping only for rousing scents along the sides.

    I now see city blocks, and their sidewalks and buildings, with their investigatory sniffing possibilities in mind: a sidewalk along an uninterrupted wall without fences, trees, or variation, is a block I'd never want to walk down. Where I'll choose to sit in the park--which bench, what rock--is based on where a dog at my side would have the best panoramic olfactory view. Pump loved large open lawns--to plop down in, to roll repeatedly in, to sniff endlessly--and high grass or brush--to lope regally through. I came to love large open laws and high grass and brush in anticipation of her enjoyment. (The interest in rolling in unseen smells remains elusive...)

    I smell the world more. I love to sit outside on a breezy day.

    My day is tilted toward morning. The importance of mornings has always been that if I awoke early enough, we could have a long, off-leash walk together in a relatively unpeopled park or beach. I still have trouble sleeping in.

    It is a very small bit comforting to realise how deeply she is in me, even over a year from the day when she was also aside me, willing to submit to a tickle of the dense curls under her chin as she rested it on the ground for the last time.”
    Alexandra Horowitz, Inside of a Dog: What Dogs See, Smell, and Know
    tags: dogs



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