Tanya > Tanya's Quotes

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  • #1
    Lois McMaster Bujold
    “So, how long has my mother had this questionable fetish for bisexual Barrayaran admirals? I don’t think even the Betans have earrings for that one.”
    Lois McMaster Bujold, Gentleman Jole and the Red Queen (Vorkosigan Saga

  • #2
    Elizabeth Knox
    “Surely it's better to be human and live with grief, than outgrow your humanity and learn to raise the dead too late to raise your own.”
    Elizabeth Knox, Black Oxen

  • #3
    T. Kingfisher
    “Oh gods, if any of you are listening, please grant that we don’t make things worse.”
    T. Kingfisher, Paladin's Grace

  • #4
    Jeanette Winterson
    “Is Donald Trump getting his brain frozen? asks Ron. Max explains that the brain has to be fully functioning at clinical death.”
    Jeanette Winterson, Frankissstein: A Love Story

  • #5
    K.J. Charles
    “a mess of frottage.”
    K.J. Charles, The Sugared Game

  • #6
    Ben H. Winters
    “Because of course a pandemic would be an absolute calamity, some deadly virus stalking the land, and you would huddle up with your family and shut out the world until it ended, but then it would—it would have an ending. A pandemic runs its course and then the world recovers.”
    Ben H. Winters, World of Trouble

  • #7
    K.J. Charles
    “There is more to life than the pursuit of happiness!” “Tell that to the United States.” Giles snorted. “Yes, and I doubt that will work out well.”
    K.J. Charles, The Gentle Art of Fortune Hunting

  • #8
    W.H. Auden
    “There are good books which are only for adults.
    There are no good books which are only for children.”
    W.H. Auden

  • #9
    Elizabeth Peters
    “...DAMNATION!'

    No device of the printer's art, not even capital letters, can indicate the intensity of that shriek of rage. Emerson is known to his Egyptian workers by the admiring sobriquet of Father of Curses. The volume as well as the content of his remarks earned him the title; but this shout was extraordinary even by Emerson's standards, so much so that the cat Bastet, who had become more or less accustomed to him, started violently, and fell with a splash into the bathtub.

    The scene that followed is best not described in detail. My efforts to rescue the thrashing feline were met with hysterical resistance; water surged over the edge of the tub and onto the floor; Emerson rushed to the rescue; Bastet emerged in one mighty leap, like a whale broaching, and fled -- cursing, spitting, and streaming water. She and Emerson met in the doorway of the bathroom.

    The ensuing silence was broken by the quavering voice of the safragi, the servant on duty outside our room, inquiring if we required his assistance. Emerson, seated on the floor in a puddle of soapy water, took a long breath. Two of the buttons popped off his shirt and splashed into the water. In a voice of exquisite calm he reassured the servant, and then transferred his bulging stare to me.

    I trust you are not injured, Peabody. Those scratches...'

    The bleeding has almost stopped, Emerson. It was not Bastet's fault.'

    It was mine, I suppose,' Emerson said mildly.

    Now, my dear, I did not say that. Are you going to get up from the floor?'

    No,' said Emerson.

    He was still holding the newspaper. Slowly and deliberately he separated the soggy pages, searching for the item that had occasioned his outburst. In the silence I heard Bastet, who had retreated under the bed, carrying on a mumbling, profane monologue. (If you ask how I knew it was profane, I presume you have never owned a cat.)”
    Elizabeth Peters, The Deeds of the Disturber

  • #10
    Neil Gaiman
    “The wise man knows when to keep silent. Only the fool tells all he knows.”
    Neil Gaiman, Odd and the Frost Giants

  • #11
    Neil Gaiman
    “Magic,' said Odd, and he smiled, and thought, if magic means letting things do what they wanted to do, or be what they wanted to be...”
    Neil Gaiman, Odd and the Frost Giants

  • #12
    Neil Gaiman
    “We weren't arguing,” said the bear. “Because we can't talk.” Then it said, “Oops.”
    Neil Gaiman, Odd and the Frost Giants

  • #13
    Louise Erdrich
    “Small bookstores have the romance of doomed intimate spaces about to be erased by unfettered capitalism. A lot of people fall in love here.”
    Louise Erdrich, The Sentence

  • #14
    Victoria   Goddard
    “...do remember that gossip when well organized is sociology, and when ill regulated, slander.”
    Victoria Goddard, Stargazy Pie

  • #15
    M.R. Carey
    “It’s called fascism, Koli-bou. It’s like ra-ra skirts and flared trousers. People get all hot for it and make themselves look ridiculous, then when the fad blows over they pretend they were never that into it.”
    M.R. Carey, The Fall of Koli

  • #16
    Ray Nayler
    “We came from the ocean, and we only survive by carrying salt water with us all our lives—in our blood, in our cells. The sea is our true home. This is why we find the shore so calming: we stand where the waves break, like exiles returning home. —Dr. Ha Nguyen, How Oceans Think”
    Ray Nayler, The Mountain in the Sea

  • #17
    Ian McDonald
    “Place becomes psyche, story becomes history.”
    Ian McDonald, Hopeland

  • #18
    Jennifer Crusie
    “Only a limp dick contests an election after he’s lost,”
    Jennifer Crusie, One in Vermillion

  • #19
    John Scalzi
    “Can we start with the cat?” I asked, sitting. CATS, Hera typed. PERSEPHONE IS MY INTERN. Persephone looked at me and mewed. “Paid internship, I hope,” I joked. OF COURSE, Hera typed back. WE’RE ANIMALS, NOT MONSTERS. I paused. “Do you actually get paid?” I asked my cat. YES. “How much?” MORE THAN YOU.”
    John Scalzi, Starter Villain

  • #20
    John Scalzi
    “What’s going on there?” THAT’S JUST SOME REAL ESTATE DEALS I’M WORKING ON. “Real estate?” I HAVE A LIFE OUTSIDE OF THIS COMPANY, YOU KNOW. “More than I do,” I said. “Is … that legal? Owning real estate?” YOU MEAN, BECAUSE I’M A CAT? “Well, yes.” I HAVE A TRUST SET UP FOR MY BENEFIT AND A HUMAN LAWYER THAT ACTS AS THE EXECUTOR. I TELL HIM WHAT TO DO, HE DOES IT. “Does he know you’re a cat?” YOU KNOW, IT’S NEVER COME UP. “So, you’re a real estate maven.” I HAVE A DIVERSIFIED PORTFOLIO, Hera wrote. MOSTLY BORING BUT SOME EXCITING PARTS. I DO A LOT OF INVESTING IN EMERGING MARKETS. “Sounds risky.” I’M A CAT, I CAN HANDLE RISK. WORST-CASE SCENARIO IS I LOSE EVERYTHING AND I STILL GET FED AND HAVE A PLACE TO NAP. “That’s … a surprisingly chill way of thinking about things.” SOMETIMES IT’S BETTER NOT TO BE A HUMAN, CHARLIE.”
    John Scalzi, Starter Villain

  • #21
    Vajra Chandrasekera
    “Every time I led him to the right place at the right time, I first quietly eliminated all the places and times that were wrong. Luck is only someone else’s labour.”
    Vajra Chandrasekera, The Saint of Bright Doors

  • #22
    Vajra Chandrasekera
    “Remember, son,” Mother-of-Glory says, compensating with pomposity for her deficits of piety or affection. “The only way to change the world is through intentional, directed violence.”
    Vajra Chandrasekera, The Saint of Bright Doors

  • #23
    Louise Penny
    “Not everything needed to be brought into the light, he knew. Not every truth needed to be told.”
    Louise Penny, A Rule Against Murder

  • #24
    Natasha Pulley
    “Someone in this crowd, maybe even someone I knew, wasn’t a human being at all.”
    Natasha Pulley, The Hymn to Dionysus

  • #25
    Natasha Pulley
    “Humans are weird animals; partly we’re wild, and partly we are clockwork. Unholy devices, all of us—mechanisms bolted onto bone.”
    Natasha Pulley, The Hymn to Dionysus

  • #26
    G.K. Chesterton
    “It’s what I call common sense, properly understood,’ replied Father Brown. ’It really is more natural to believe a preternatural story, that deals with things we don’t understand, than a natural story that contradicts things we do understand. Tell me that the great Mr Gladstone, in his last hours, was haunted by the ghost of Parnell, and I will be agnostic about it. But tell me that Mr Gladstone, when first presented to Queen Victoria, wore his hat in her drawing-room and slapped her on the back and offered her a cigar, and I am not agnostic at all. That is not impossible; it’s only incredible. But I’m much more certain it didn’t happen than that Parnell’s ghost didn’t appear; because it violates the laws of the world I do understand. So it is with that tale of the curse. It isn’t the legend that I disbelieve — it’s the history.”
    G.K. Chesterton, The Incredulity of Father Brown

  • #27
    Mary Doria Russell
    “What is it in humans that makes us so eager to believe ill of one another? ... What makes us so hungry for it? Failed idealism, he suspected. We disappoint ourselves and then look around for other failures to convince ourselves: it's not just me. (15)”
    Mary Doria Russell, Children of God



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