Cin > Cin's Quotes

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  • #1
    Danielle  Evans
    “Things were always salvageable between us, and knowing that felt like both a relief and an obligation.”
    Danielle Evans, The Office of Historical Corrections

  • #2
    Zadie Smith
    “We are so convinced of the goodness of ourselves, and the goodness of our love, we cannot bear to believe that there might be something more worthy of love than us, more worthy of worship. Greetings cards routinely tell us everybody deserves love. No. Everybody deserves clean water. Not everybody deserves love all the time.”
    Zadie Smith, White Teeth

  • #3
    Dave Eggers
    “Now the movie stars beg people to follow their Zing feeds. They send pleading messages asking everyone to smile at them. And holy fuck, the mailing lists! Everyone’s a junk mailer. You know how I spend an hour every day? Thinking of ways to unsubscribe to mailing lists without hurting anyone’s feelings. There’s this new neediness—it pervades everything.”
    Dave Eggers, The Circle

  • #3
    Mamrie Hart
    “Sunsets are the photography equivalent of people telling you what they dreamt.”
    Mamrie Hart, You Deserve a Drink: Boozy Misadventures and Tales of Debauchery

  • #4
    Cheryl Strayed
    “I’d never had a mind for math. I simply couldn’t hold the formulas and numbers in my head. It was a logic that made little sense to me. In my perception, the world wasn’t a graph or formula or an equation. It was a story.”
    Cheryl Strayed, Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail

  • #5
    Kim Thúy
    “I remember some students in my high school who complained about the compulsory history classes. Young as we were, we didn’t realize that the course was a privilege only countries at peace can afford. Elsewhere,”
    Kim Thúy, Ru: A Novel

  • #6
    “she asked ‘you are in love what does love look like’ to which i replied ‘like everything i’ve ever lost come back to me.”
    Nayyirah Waheed, salt.

  • #8
    Kim  Gordon
    “Guys playing music. I loved music. I wanted to push up close to whatever it was men felt when they were together onstage—to try to ink in that invisible thing. It wasn't sexual, but it wasn't unsexual either. Distance mattered in male friendships. One on one, men often had little to say to one another. They found some closeness by focusing on a third thing that wasn't them: music, video games, golf, women. Male friendships were triangular in shape, and that allowed two men some version of intimacy. In retrospect, that's why I joined a band, so I could be inside that male dynamic, not staring in through a closed window but looking out.”
    Kim Gordon, Girl in a Band

  • #9
    Dave Eggers
    “I mean, all this stuff you're involved in, it's all gossip. It's people talking about each other behind their backs. That's the vast majority of this social media, all these reviews, all these comments. Your tools have elevated gossip, hearsay and conjecture to the level of valid, mainstream communication. And besides that, it's fucking dorky.”
    Dave Eggers, The Circle

  • #10
    Lily King
    “We were standing in the shallows yesterday waving him off and I remembered a fall day when I was about 8 or 9 and my brother & I had played with some new children in our neighborhood for the first time and we were being called to dinner and we stood in the yard with them chilled by the sudden evening but warm from running and I had a terrible fear that we’d never play like that again, that it would never be the same. I don’t remember if my premonition proved true. I just remember the stonelike weight in my chest as I went up the back steps.”
    Lily King, Euphoria

  • #11
    Lily King
    “And yet she wrote with an urgency most of us felt but did not have the courage to reveal, because we were too beholden to the traditions of the old sciences. For so long I’d felt that what I’d been trained to do in academic writing was to press my nose to the ground, and here was Nell Stone with her head raised and swiveling in all directions.”
    Lily King, Euphoria

  • #12
    Lily King
    “She laughed. ‘Was she wine or bread to you?’ ‘What do you mean?’ ‘It’s from an Amy Lowell poem we all loved in college. Wine is sort of thrilling and sensual, and bread is familiar and essential.”
    Lily King, Euphoria

  • #13
    Reza Aslan
    “sacred history is like a hallowed tree whose roots dig deep into primordial time and whose branches weave in and out of genuine history with little concern for the boundaries of space and time. Indeed, it is precisely at those moments when sacred and genuine history collide that religions are born.”
    Reza Aslan, No God But God: The Origins, Evolution and Future of Islam

  • #14
    Victoria Moran
    “In fact, just heading toward veganism lifts a not insignificant burden from the earth. According to food pundit Michael Pollan, who’s not a vegetarian, if everybody did even “Meatless Monday,” it would be the environmental equivalent of taking 20 million midsize cars off the road.”
    Victoria Moran, Main Street Vegan: Everything You Need to Know to Eat Healthfully and Live Compassionately in the Real World

  • #15
    Victoria Moran
    “According to the USDA, it takes 11 calories of fossil fuel to produce 1 calorie of protein in the form of meat, poultry, or fish; soy is forty-five times more efficient.”
    Victoria Moran, Main Street Vegan: Everything You Need to Know to Eat Healthfully and Live Compassionately in the Real World

  • #16
    Kim Thúy
    “A Vietnamese saying has it that “Only those with long hair are afraid, for no one can pull the hair of those who have none.” And so I try as much as possible to acquire only those things that don’t extend beyond the limits of my body.”
    Kim Thúy, Ru: A Novel

  • #17
    Paulo Coelho
    “The boy felt jealous of the freedom of the wind, and saw that he could have the same freedom. There was nothing to hold him back except himself.”
    Paulo Coelho, The Alchemist

  • #18
    Paulo Coelho
    “If I can learn to understand this language without words, I can learn to understand the world. Relaxed”
    Paulo Coelho, The Alchemist

  • #19
    Paulo Coelho
    “I’m alive,” he said to the boy, as they ate a bunch of dates one night, with no fires and no moon. “When I’m eating, that’s all I think about. If I’m on the march, I just concentrate on marching. If I have to fight, it will be just as good a day to die as any other. “Because I don’t live in either my past or my future. I’m interested only in the present. If you can concentrate always on the present, you’ll be a happy man. You’ll see that there is life in the desert, that there are stars in the heavens, and that tribesmen fight because they are part of the human race. Life will be a party for you, a grand festival, because life is the moment we’re living right now.” Two”
    Paulo Coelho, The Alchemist

  • #20
    Paulo Coelho
    “People become fascinated with pictures and words, and wind up forgetting the Language of the World”
    Paulo Coelho, The Alchemist

  • #21
    Paulo Coelho
    “You will never be able to escape from your heart. So it's better to listen to what it has to say.”
    Paulo Coelho, The Alchemist

  • #22
    Steve  Martin
    “His view of the world is one that keeps his blood pressure low, sweeping the cholesterol from his relaxed, freeway-sized arteries. Everyone knows he is going to live till age ninety, although the question that goes begging is, “for what?”
    Steve Martin, Shopgirl

  • #23
    Steve  Martin
    “She has learned that her body is precious and it mustn’t be offered carelessly ever again, as it holds a direct connection to her heart.”
    Steve Martin, Shopgirl

  • #24
    Ralph Waldo Emerson
    “When simplicity of character and the sovereignty of ideas is broken up by the prevalence of secondary desires, the desire of riches, of pleasure, of power, and of praise,—and duplicity and falsehood take place of simplicity and truth, the power over nature as an interpreter of the will, is in a degree lost; new imagery ceases to be created, and old words are perverted to stand for things which are not; a paper currency is employed, when there is no bullion in the vaults. In”
    Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nature

  • #25
    Ralph Waldo Emerson
    “There seems to be a necessity in spirit to manifest itself in material forms; and day and night, river and storm, beast and bird, acid and alkali, preexist in necessary Ideas in the mind of God, and are what they are by virtue of preceding affections, in the world of spirit. A Fact is the end or last issue of spirit. The visible creation is the terminus or the circumference of the invisible world. "Material”
    Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nature

  • #26
    Ralph Waldo Emerson
    “The granite is differenced in its laws only by the more or less of heat, from the river that wears it away. The river, as it flows, resembles the air that flows over it; the air resembles the light which traverses it with more subtile currents; the light resembles the heat which rides with it through Space. Each creature is only a modification of the other; the likeness in them is more than the difference, and their radical law is one and the same. A”
    Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nature

  • #27
    Mohsin Hamid
    “A common strand appeared to unite these conflicts, and that was the advancement of a small coterie’s concept of American interests in the guise of the fight against terrorism, which was defined to refer only to the organized and politically motivated killing of civilians by killers not wearing the uniforms of soldiers. I recognized that if this was to be the single most important priority of our species, then the lives of those of us who lived in lands in which such killers also lived had no meaning except as collateral damage. This, I reasoned, was why America felt justified in bringing so many deaths to Afghanistan and Iraq, and why America felt justified in risking so many more deaths by tacitly using India to pressure Pakistan.”
    Mohsin Hamid, The Reluctant Fundamentalist

  • #28
    “I always thought that the “thriving” would come when everything was perfect, and what I learned is that it’s actually down in the mess that things get good.”
    Joanna Gaines, The Magnolia Story

  • #29
    Ralph Waldo Emerson
    “Whilst we behold unveiled the nature of Justice and Truth, we learn the difference between the absolute and the conditional or relative. We apprehend the absolute. As it were, for the first time, we exist. We become immortal, for we learn that time and space are relations of matter; that, with a perception of truth, or a virtuous will, they have no affinity.”
    Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nature

  • #30
    Ralph Waldo Emerson
    “Idealism saith: matter is a phenomenon, not a substance. Idealism acquaints us with the total disparity between the evidence of our own being, and the evidence of the world's being. The one is perfect; the other, incapable of any assurance; the mind is a part of the nature of things; the world is a divine dream, from which we may presently awake to the glories and certainties of day. Idealism is a hypothesis to account for nature by other principles than those of carpentry and chemistry. Yet,”
    Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nature



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