Scott > Scott's Quotes

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  • #1
    “But this, too, you could say, is part of the American story, as we have always been people who move on, leaving behind wreckage and fragments in our wake.”
    Colin Dickey, Ghostland: An American History in Haunted Places

  • #2
    Michael    Connelly
    “Funny, Dad, but my generation is visual. We don’t tell people what other people are doing. We show what we’re doing. We put up photos.”
    Michael Connelly, The Wrong Side of Goodbye

  • #3
    Michael    Connelly
    “He knew that in his internal universe, there was a mission etched in a secret language, like drawings on the wall of an ancient cave, that gave him his direction and meaning. It could not be altered and it would always be there to guide him to the right path.”
    Michael Connelly, The Wrong Side of Goodbye

  • #4
    J. Frank Dobie
    “He had a conscience as elastic as any politician could wish for.”
    J. Frank Dobie, Coronado's Children: Tales of Lost Mines and Buried Treasures of the Southwest

  • #5
    Tana French
    “I just knew nothing in the world, not the Mona Lisa walking through the Grand Canyon with the Holy Grail in one hand and a winning Lotto ticket in the other, was ever going to be that beautiful. Kevin”
    Tana French, Faithful Place

  • #6
    Tana French
    “give my family an inch and they’ll move into your house and start redecorating.”
    Tana French, Faithful Place

  • #7
    Tana French
    “When she was born I wanted to go out and kill someone for her, so she would know for sure, all her life, that I was ready to do it if it needed doing.”
    Tana French, Faithful Place

  • #8
    Tana French
    “I don’t think there are any rules for how you’re supposed to act when someone you care about dies, sweetheart. I think you just have to figure it out as you go along. Sometimes you’ll feel like crying, sometimes you won’t, sometimes you’ll be raging at him for dying on you. You just have to remember that all of those are OK. So is whatever else your head comes up with.”
    Tana French, Faithful Place

  • #9
    Tana French
    “For months she had slowly been turning into my own secret magnetic north.”
    Tana French, Faithful Place

  • #10
    Tana French
    “The summer stretch had come into the evenings: it was gone seven, but the sky was a soft clear blue and the light flooding through the open windows was pale gold. All around us the Place was humming like a beehive, shimmering with a hundred different stories unfurling. Next door Mad Johnny Malone was singing to himself, in a cheerful cracked baritone: “Where the Strawberry Beds sweep down to the Liffey, you’ll kiss away the worries from my brow . . .” Downstairs Mandy shrieked delightedly, there was a tumble of thumping noises and then an explosion of laughter; farther down, in the basement, someone yelled in pain and Shay and his mates sent up a savage cheer. In the street, two of Sallie Hearne’s young fellas were teaching themselves to ride a robbed bike and giving each other hassle—“No, you golf ball, you’ve to go fast or you’ll fall off, who cares if you hit things?”—and someone was whistling on his way home from work, putting in all the fancy, happy little trills. The smell of fish and chips came in at the windows, along with smart-arse comments from a blackbird on a rooftop and the voices of women swapping the day’s gossip while they brought in their washing from the back gardens. I knew every voice and every door-slam; I even knew the determined rhythm of Mary Halley scrubbing her front steps. If I had listened hard I could have picked out every single person woven into that summer-evening air, and told you every story.”
    Tana French, Faithful Place

  • #11
    Jo Nesbø
    “Aristotle wrote that the human soul is purged by the fear and compassion that tragedy evokes.”
    Jo Nesbø, Nemesis

  • #12
    Tariq Ramadan
    “Nothing is ever final” is a lesson in humility; “no final judgment should be passed” is a promise of hope. The”
    Tariq Ramadan, In the Footsteps of the Prophet: Lessons from the Life of Muhammad

  • #13
    Tariq Ramadan
    “Communion in faith, in the intimacy of meaning, cannot remain purely conceptual; it can maintain its vivifying energy only if it associates with communion in speech and action within a common space of social and cultural references. Faith needs culture.”
    Tariq Ramadan, In the Footsteps of the Prophet: Lessons from the Life of Muhammad

  • #14
    Tana French
    “Only teenagers think boring is bad. Adults, grown men and women who've been around the block a few times, know that boring is a gift straight from God. Life has more than enough excitement up its sleeve, ready to hit you with as soon as you're not looking, without you adding to the drama.”
    Tana French, Broken Harbour

  • #15
    Tana French
    “Boyle is a round, pancake-faced little oddball who gives you the impression that he has a room at home packed with disturbing magazines, neatly alphabetized, but he runs a scene impeccably”
    Tana French, Broken Harbor

  • #16
    “by the mid-nineteenth century, Plains Indian men were taller than any documented population in the entire world, standing about a half inch above European Americans and towering a full two to five inches over their sickly European counterparts. The Cheyennes, who were the tallest of all, were the same height as well-nourished American men in the late twentieth century.”
    Claudio Saunt, West of the Revolution: An Uncommon History of 1776

  • #17
    Lauret Savoy
    “Odysseus said, “I belong in the place of my departure and I belong in the place that is my destination”
    Lauret Savoy, Trace: Memory, History, Race, and the American Landscape

  • #18
    Mark Adams
    “They take our property, take away ground, and when we complain to them about it, they employ a lawyer and go to court and win the case,” one Tlingit leader testified before the district governor in 1884. “We are very poor now. The time will come when we”
    Mark Adams, Tip of the Iceberg: My 3,000-Mile Journey Around Wild Alaska, the Last Great American Frontier

  • #19
    Russell Shorto
    “The only thing that we can say is really real, truly true, is pure experience. What is real is the flow, the constant but ever-changing pageant comprised of minds and things.”
    Russell Shorto, Saints and Madmen: How Science Got Religion

  • #20
    Susan Orlean
    “if something you learn or observe or imagine can be set down and saved, and if you can see your life reflected in previous lives, and can imagine it reflected in subsequent ones, you can begin to discover order and harmony. You know that you are a part of a larger story that has shape and purpose—a tangible, familiar past and a constantly refreshed future. We are all whispering in a tin can on a string, but we are heard, so we whisper the message into the next tin can and the next string.”
    Susan Orlean, The Library Book

  • #21
    Caimh McDonnell
    “It was like he’d just been issued with a human head for the first time and he was trying to figure out how it worked.”
    Caimh McDonnell, Angels in the Moonlight

  • #22
    William Atkins
    “yet it quickly becomes apparent that, just as the desert is not silent, it is far from being still.”
    William Atkins, The Immeasurable World: Journeys in Desert Places

  • #23
    William Atkins
    “You might travel to escape the self, but in the desert of all places, where there is little else, you are thrown back upon your mind and your body with intensified force.”
    William Atkins, The Immeasurable World: Journeys in Desert Places

  • #24
    Olen Steinhauer
    “Democracy functions in Protestant nations. It barely functions in Catholic nations. It doesn’t function at all in Orthodox nations.”
    Olen Steinhauer, The Nearest Exit

  • #25
    William Atkins
    “dreams for the year, the fisherman”
    William Atkins, The Immeasurable World: Journeys in Desert Places

  • #26
    Caimh McDonnell
    “Brigit bet she practised that in the mirror, trying to look as psychiatristy as possible.”
    Caimh McDonnell, Last Orders

  • #27
    William Atkins
    “I feel slightly astonished. Night after night, these eager young men climbing 400 metres and pressing themselves into a hole in the earth for hours at a time, and doing it with joy. They’re all but indistinguishable—save for their phones and trainers—from their predecessors of the past fifteen hundred years; and that is at the heart of their pleasure, of course. We”
    William Atkins, The Immeasurable World: Journeys in Desert Places

  • #28
    Caimh McDonnell
    “I’m a police officer. Wouldn’t look good, me sitting around in a hotel bar, drinking.” Again, that sounded odd – ‘Eskimo freaks”
    Caimh McDonnell, Last Orders

  • #29
    Caimh McDonnell
    “Life gives you very few chances and, believe you me, if you mess this one up, you’ll spend the rest of your life regretting it.”
    Caimh McDonnell, Last Orders

  • #30
    Kate  Harris
    “define stones as rocks that have been put to use, so that, as the poet Don McKay put it, “What happens between a rock and stone is simply everything human.” At”
    Kate Harris, Lands of Lost Borders: A Journey on the Silk Road



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