Ali > Ali's Quotes

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  • #1
    Shirley Jackson
    “I was thinking what it must feel like to be a prisoner going to die; you stand there looking at the sun and the sky and the grass and the trees, and because it's the last time you're going to see them they're wonderful, full of colors you never noticed before, and bright and beautiful and terribly hard to leave behind. And then, suppose you're reprieved, and you get up the next morning and you're not dead; could you look again at the sun and the trees and the sky and think they're the same old sun and sky and trees, nothing special at all, just the same told things you've seen every day? Not changed at all, just because you don't have to give them up?”
    Shirley Jackson, The Bird's Nest

  • #2
    J.K. Rowling
    “There you go, Harry!” Ron shouted over the noise. “You weren’t being thick after all — you were showing moral fiber!”
    J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire

  • #3
    J.K. Rowling
    “He had no memory of ever being hugged like this, as though by a mother. The full weight of everything he had seen that night seemed to fall in upon him as Mrs. Weasley held him to her. His mother's face, his father's voice, the sight of Cedric, dead on the ground all started spinning in his head until he could hardly bear it, until he was screwing up his face against the howl of misery fighting to get out of him.”
    J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire

  • #4
    Patricia Highsmith
    “It would be Carol, in a thousand cities, a thousand houses, in foreign lands where they would go together, in heaven and in hell.”
    Patricia Highsmith, The Price of Salt

  • #5
    Patricia Highsmith
    “I know what they'd like, they'd like a blank they could fill in. A person already filled in disturbs them terribly.”
    Patricia Highsmith, The Price of Salt

  • #6
    Shirley Jackson
    “Around her the trees and wild flowers, with that oddly courteous air of natural things suddenly interrupted in their pressing occupations of growing and dying, turned toward her with attention, as though, dull and imperceptive as she was, it was still necessary for them to be gentle to a creation so unfortunate as not to be rooted in the ground, forced to go from one place to another, heart-breakingly mobile.”
    Shirley Jackson, The Haunting of Hill House



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