Ghost Reader > Ghost's Quotes

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  • #1
    Fyodor Dostoevsky
    “Pain and suffering are always inevitable for a large intelligence and a deep heart. The really great men must, I think, have great sadness on earth.”
    Fyodor Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment

  • #2
    Patti Smith
    “Please, no matter how we advance technologically, please don't abandon the book. There is nothing in our material world more beautiful than the book."

    (Acceptance speech, National Book Award 2010 (Nonfiction), November 17, 2010)”
    Patti Smith

  • #3
    Philip Roth
    “Literature takes a habit of mind that has disappeared. It requires silence, some form of isolation, and sustained concentration in the presence of an enigmatic thing.”
    Philip Roth

  • #4
    Susan Sontag
    “I am tired of being a person. Not just tired of being the person I was, but any person at all. I like watching people, but I don’t like talking to them, dealing with them, pleasing them, or offending them. I am tired.”
    Susan Sontag, I, etcetera

  • #5
    John   Waters
    “We need to make books cool again. If you go home with somebody and they don't have books, don't fuck them.”
    John Waters

  • #6
    Machado de Assis
    “Por que bonita, se coxa? Por que coxa, se bonita?”
    Machado de Assis, Memórias póstumas de Brás Cubas

  • #6
    Ludwig Wittgenstein
    “When we can't think for ourselves, we can always quote”
    Ludwig Wittgenstein

  • #7
    Thomas Bernhard
    “everything is ridiculous if one thinks of death”
    Thomas Bernhard

  • #9
    Milan Kundera
    “The Greek word for "return" is nostos. Algos means "suffering." So nostalgia is the suffering caused by an unappeased yearning to return.”
    Milan Kundera, Ignorance

  • #10
    Søren Kierkegaard
    “Listen to the cry of a woman in labor at the hour of giving birth — look at the dying man’s struggle at his last extremity, and then tell me whether something that begins and ends thus could be intended for enjoyment.”
    Soren Kierkegaard
    tags: life

  • #11
    Søren Kierkegaard
    “The self is a relation which relates itself to its own self, or it is that in the relation that the relation relates itself to its own self; the self is not the relation but that the relation relates itself to its own self.”
    Søren Kierkegaard, The Sickness Unto Death: A Christian Psychological Exposition for Upbuilding and Awakening



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