Evan > Evan's Quotes

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  • #1
    Jeff Vandermeer
    “The world we are a part of now is difficult to accept, unimaginably difficult. I don’t know if I accept everything even now. I don’t know how I can. But acceptance moves past denial, and maybe there’s defiance in that, too.”
    Jeff VanderMeer, Acceptance

  • #2
    Jedediah Purdy
    “The equality of tolerance is not that far from indifference, and very far from the equality of opportunity that LBJ envisioned.”
    Jedediah Purdy, A Tolerable Anarchy: Rebels, Reactionaries, and the Making of American Freedom

  • #3
    Jedediah Purdy
    “Take a step back to recall the story that this book tells, and consider how it might come to a very unhappy ending. Imagine the history our disappointed descendants might write. For centuries, the moral teachings of a civilization held self—interest and self-trust to be the sins of frail and deluded humanity. These traditional teachings denied that societies could discern distinct and viable principles of order and design their own institutions accordingly. The denounced such efforts as doomed hubris. Then, in an unprecedented experiment, some people rejected the old wisdom. They took the heart’s desire and the body’s appetite as compass points and rededicated human ingenuity to serving them. They created new forms of order to house these inverted values. For a time, the experiment succeeded, changing life so dramatically that the utopian visions of one century became the pedestrian common sense of the next.

    Then, suddenly and drastically, the experiment failed. Self-interest and self-trust proved to be formulas for devastating the world. Democratic polities, the other moral center of the great experiment, could not stop runaway self-destruction and turned out to abet it instead. Faced with overwhelming evidence that they were on an unsustainable course, the freedom-loving peoples of the twenty-first century wrung their hands, congratulated themselves on their hybrid cars and locally grown food, and changed little, because it never made sense for anyone or any country to do so.”
    Jedediah Purdy, A Tolerable Anarchy: Rebels, Reactionaries, and the Making of American Freedom

  • #4
    Ha-Joon Chang
    “Recognizing that the boundaries of the market are ambiguous and cannot be determined in an objective way lets us realize that economics is not a science like physics or chemistry, but a political exercise... If the boundaries of what you are studying cannot be scientifically determined, what you are doing is not a science.”
    Ha-Joon Chang, 23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism

  • #5
    David  Mitchell
    “Finally, I've reached the grandfather clock. Its face has no hands, only the words TIME IS, TIME WAS, TIME IS NOT. Highly metaphysical; deeply useless.”
    David Mitchell, Slade House

  • #6
    David  Mitchell
    “The only explanation is that my senses, memory, and mind are conspiring against my well-being, and nothing’s scarier than that.”
    David Mitchell, Slade House

  • #7
    Tamsyn Muir
    “I am sick of roses, and I am horny for revenge.”
    Tamsyn Muir, Harrow the Ninth

  • #8
    Tamsyn Muir
    “You were an unfilled hole, but even a hole might be content in its emptiness.”
    Tamsyn Muir, Harrow the Ninth

  • #9
    Tamsyn Muir
    “You're not waiting for her resurrection; you've made yourself her mausoleum.”
    Tamsyn Muir, Harrow the Ninth

  • #10
    Grady Hendrix
    “How does a sparrow destroy a mountain? One pebble at a time.”
    Grady Hendrix, We Sold Our Souls

  • #11
    Clive Barker
    “A skin was nothing. Pigs had skins; snakes had skins. They were knitted of dead cells, shed and grown and shed again. But a name? That was a spell, which summoned memories.”
    Clive Barker, The Hellbound Heart

  • #12
    Sylvia Plath
    “I can never read all the books I want; I can never be all the people I want and live all the lives I want. I can never train myself in all the skills I want. And why do I want? I want to live and feel all the shades, tones and variations of mental and physical experience possible in my life. And I am horribly limited.”
    Sylvia Plath, The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath

  • #13
    Rebecca Makkai
    “But when someone’s gone and you’re the primary keeper of his memory—letting go would be a kind of murder, wouldn’t it? I had so much love for him, even if it was a complicated love, and where is all that love supposed to go? He was gone, so it couldn’t change, it couldn’t turn to indifference. I was stuck with all that love.”
    Rebecca Makkai, The Great Believers

  • #14
    Rebecca Makkai
    “You should know we had so much joy as well! But when you build a story down, you end up with something macabre. All stories end the same way, don't they.”
    Rebecca Makkai, The Great Believers

  • #15
    Sally Rooney
    “Maybe we're just born to love and worry about the people we know, and to go on loving and worrying even when there are more important things we should be doing. And if that means the human species is going to die out, isn't it in a way a nice reason to die out, the nicest reason you can imagine? Because when we should have been reorganising the distribution of the world's resources and transitioning collectively to a sustainable economic model, we were worrying about sex and friendship instead. Because we loved each other too much and found each other too interesting. And I love that about humanity, and in fact it's the very reason I root for us to survive - because we are so stupid about each other.”
    Sally Rooney, Beautiful World, Where Are You

  • #16
    Sally Rooney
    “And isn’t death just the apocalypse in the first person?”
    Sally Rooney, Beautiful World, Where Are You

  • #17
    Sally Rooney
    “People think that socialism is sustained by force—the forcible expropriation of property—but I wish they would just admit that capitalism is also sustained by exactly the same force in the opposite direction, the forcible protection of existing property arrangements.”
    Sally Rooney, Beautiful World, Where Are You

  • #18
    Sally Rooney
    “We can’t conserve anything, and especially not social relations, without altering their nature, arresting some part of their interaction with time in an unnatural way.”
    Sally Rooney, Beautiful World, Where Are You

  • #19
    Sally Rooney
    “But do you ever experience a sort of diluted, personalised version of that feeling, as if your own life, your own world, has slowly but perceptibly become an uglier place? Or even a sense that while you used to be in step with the cultural discourse, you’re not anymore, and you feel yourself adrift from the world of ideas, alienated, with no intellectual home? Maybe it is about our specific historical moment, or maybe it’s just about getting older and disillusioned, and it happens to everyone. When I look back on what we were like when we first met, I don’t think we were really wrong about anything, except about ourselves. The ideas were right, but the mistake was that we thought we mattered. Well, we’ve both had that particular error ground out of us in different ways – me by achieving precisely nothing in over a decade of adult life, and you (if you’ll forgive me) by achieving as much as you possibly could and still not making one grain of difference to the smooth functioning of the capitalist system. When we were young, we thought our responsibilities stretched out to encompass the earth and everything that lived on it.”
    Sally Rooney, Beautiful World, Where Are You

  • #20
    Sally Rooney
    “So of course in the midst of everything, the state of the world being what it is, humanity on the cusp of extinction, here I am writing another email about sex and friendship. What else is there to live for?”
    Sally Rooney, Beautiful World, Where Are You

  • #21
    Sally Rooney
    “Of course I know in my brain that everything we tell ourselves about human civilisation is a lie. But imagine having to find out in real life.”
    Sally Rooney, Beautiful World, Where Are You

  • #22
    Sally Rooney
    “But we all have something wrong with us anyway, don't we? I looked at the internet for too long today and started feeling depressed.”
    Sally Rooney, Beautiful World, Where Are You

  • #23
    Sally Rooney
    “Each day, even each hour of each day, replaces and makes irrelevant the time before, and the events of our lives make sense only in relation to a perpetually updating timeline of news content.”
    Sally Rooney, Beautiful World, Where Are You

  • #24
    Sally Rooney
    “I think of the twentieth century as one long question, and in the end we got the answer wrong. Aren’t we unfortunate babies to be born as the world ended? After that there was no chance for the planet, and no chance for us. Or maybe it was just the end of one civilisation, ours, and at some point in the future another will take its place. In that case we are standing in the last lighted room before the darkness, bearing witness to something.”
    Sally Rooney, Beautiful World, Where Are You

  • #25
    Thomas Pynchon
    “Explosion without an objective', declared Miles Blundell, 'is politics in its purest form'.”
    Thomas Pynchon, Against the Day

  • #26
    Thomas Pynchon
    “Damn you all. You have no idea what you're heading into. This world you take to be 'the' world will die, and descend into Hell, and all history after that will belong properly to the history of Hell.”
    Thomas Pynchon, Against the Day

  • #27
    Thomas Pynchon
    “Remember, God didn't say, 'I'm gonna make light now,' he said, 'Let there be light.' His first act was to allow light in to what had been Nothing. Like God, you also have to always work with the light, make it do only what you want it to do.”
    Thomas Pynchon, Against the Day

  • #28
    Thomas Pynchon
    “And when Franz Ferdinand pays, everybody pays!”
    Thomas Pynchon, Against the Day

  • #29
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Nobody deserves anything,” Evelyn says. “It's simply a matter of who's willing to go and take it for themselves. And you, Monique, are a person who has proven to be willing to go out there and take what you want. So be honest about that. No one is just a victim or a victor. Everyone is somewhere in between. People who go around casting themselves as one or the other are not only kidding themselves, but they're also painfully unoriginal.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

  • #30
    Rebecca Makkai
    “How many times did I have to learn the same lesson? You’re not special. And that’s okay.”
    Rebecca Makkai, I Have Some Questions For You



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