Joanna > Joanna's Quotes

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  • #1
    Jaume Cabré
    “Książki, która nie zasługuje na ponowne przeczytanie, nie warto było czytać w ogóle.”
    Jaume Cabré, Jo confesso

  • #2
    Erich Maria Remarque
    “I am young, I am twenty years old; yet I know nothing of life but despair, death, fear, and fatuous superficiality cast over an abyss of sorrow. I see how peoples are set against one another, and in silence, unknowingly, foolishly, obediently, innocently slay one another.”
    Erich Maria Remarque, All Quiet on the Western Front
    tags: war, ww1

  • #3
    Erich Maria Remarque
    “I did not want to think so much about her. I wanted to take her as an unexpected, delightful gift, that had come and would go again — nothing more. I meant not to give room to the thought that it could ever be more. I knew too well that all love has the desire for eternity and that therein lies its eternal torment. Nothing lasts. Nothing.”
    Erich Maria Remarque, Three Comrades

  • #4
    Erich Maria Remarque
    “Am I jealous? he thought, astonished. Jealous of the chance object to which she has attached herself? Jealous of something that does not concern me? One can be jealous of a love that has turned away, but not of that to which it has turned.”
    Erich Maria Remarque, Arch of Triumph: A Novel of a Man Without a Country

  • #5
    Erich Maria Remarque
    “-Why does a man live?
    -In order to think about it...”
    Erich Maria Remarque, Arch of Triumph: A Novel of a Man Without a Country

  • #6
    Gabriel García Márquez
    “Wherever they might be they always remember that the past was a lie, that memory has no return, that every spring gone by could never be recovered, and that the wildest and most tenacious love was an ephemeral truth in the end.”
    Gabriel García Márquez, One Hundred Years of Solitude

  • #7
    Jeffrey Eugenides
    “People don't save other people. People save themselves.”
    Jeffrey Eugenides, The Marriage Plot

  • #8
    Jeffrey Eugenides
    “The more she thought about it, the more Madeleine understood that extreme solitude didn't just describe the way she was feeling about Leonard. It explained how she'd always felt when she was in love. It explained what love was like and, just maybe, what was wrong with it.”
    Jeffrey Eugenides, The Marriage Plot

  • #9
    Jeffrey Eugenides
    “...the novel had reached its apogee with the marriage plot and had never recovered from its disappearance. In the days when success in life had depended on marriage, and marriage had depended on money, novelists had had a subject to write about. The great epics sang of war, the novel of marriage. Sexual equality, good for women, had been bad for the novel. And divorce had undone it completely. What would it matter whom Emma married if she could file for separation later? How would Isabel Archer’s marriage to Gilbert Osmond have been affected by the existence of a prenup? As far as Saunders was concerned, marriage didn’t mean much anymore, and neither did the novel. Where could you find the marriage plot nowadays? You couldn’t. You had to read historical fiction. You had to read non-Western novels involving traditional societies. Afghani novels, Indian novels. You had to go, literarily speaking, back in time.”
    Jeffrey Eugenides, The Marriage Plot



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