Shaw > Shaw's Quotes

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  • #1
    Anthony Doerr
    “But books, like people, die. They die in fires or floods or in the mouths of worms or at the whims of tyrants. If they are not safeguarded, they go out of the world. And when a book goes out of the world, the memory dies a second death.”
    Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land

  • #2
    Each morning comes along and you assume it will be similar enough to the previous
    “Each morning comes along and you assume it will be similar enough to the previous one—that you will be safe, that your family will be alive, that you will be together, that life will remain mostly as it was. Then a moment arrives and everything changes.”
    Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land

  • #3
    Anthony Doerr
    “All her life she has been led to believe that she is a child born at the end of things: the empire, the era, the reign of men on earth. But in the glow of the scribes' enthusiasm, she senses that in a city like Urbino, beyond the horizon, other possibilities might exist, and in daydreams she takes flight across the Aegean, through her spread fingers, until she alights in a bright clean palace, full of Justice and Moderation, its rooms lined with books, free to anyone who can read them.”
    Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land

  • #4
    Anthony Doerr
    “Almost overnight, the streets glow with meaning. She reads inscriptions on coins, on cornerstones and tombstones, on lead seals and buttress piers and marble plaques embedded into the defensive walls—each twisting lane of the city a great battered manuscript in its own right.”
    Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land

  • #5
    Anthony Doerr
    “The things that look fixed in the world, child—mountains, wealth, empires—their permanence is only an illusion. We believe they will last, but that is only because of the brevity of our own lives. From the perspective of God, cities like this come and go like anthills.”
    Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo Land



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