Baba Yaga Reads > Baba Yaga Reads's Quotes

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  • #1
    Neil Gaiman
    “Sir. Might I with due respect remind you that Mister Vandemar and myself burned down the City of Troy? We brought the Black Plague to Flanders. We have assassinated a dozen kings, five popes, half a hundred heroes and two accredited gods. Our last commission before this was the torturing to death of an entire monastery in sixteenth-century Tuscany. We are utterly professional.”
    Neil Gaiman, Neverwhere

  • #2
    F. Scott Fitzgerald
    “Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that's no matter--tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther.... And one fine morning-- So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”
    F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby

  • #3
    Catherynne M. Valente
    “That's how you get deathless, volchitsa. Walk the same tale over and over, until you wear a groove in the world, until even if you vanished, the tale would keep turning, keep playing, like a phonograph, and you'd have to get up again, even with a bullet through your eye, to play your part and say your lines.”
    Catherynne M. Valente, Deathless

  • #4
    Zadie Smith
    “The past is always tense, the future perfect.”
    Zadie Smith

  • #5
    Amal El-Mohtar
    “Hunger, Red—to sate a hunger or to stoke it, to feel hunger as a furnace, to trace its edges like teeth—is this a thing you, singly, know? Have you ever had a hunger that whetted itself on what you fed it, sharpened so keen and bright that it might split you open, break a new thing out? Sometimes I think that’s what I have instead of friends.”
    Amal El-Mohtar, This Is How You Lose the Time War

  • #6
    Sally Rooney
    “It was culture as class performance, literature fetishised for its ability to take educated people on false emotional journeys, so that they might afterwards feel superior to the uneducated people whose emotional journeys they liked to read about.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #7
    Elena Ferrante
    “Capii che ero arrivata lì piena di superbia e mi resi conto che—in buona fede certo, con affetto—avevo fatto tutto quel viaggio soprattutto per mostrarle ciò che lei aveva perso e ciò che io avevo vinto. Ma lei se ne era accorta fin dal momento in cui le ero comparsa davanti e ora, rischiando attriti coi compagni di lavoro e multe, stava reagendo spiegandomi di fatto che non avevo vinto niente, che al mondo non c'era alcunché da vincere, che la sua vita era piena di avventure diverse e scriteriate proprio quanto la mia, e che il tempo semplicemente scivolava via senza alcun senso, ed era bello solo vedersi ogni tanto per sentire il suono folle del cervello dell'una echeggiare dentro il suono folle del cervello dell'altra.”
    Elena Ferrante, The Story of a New Name

  • #8
    Elsa Morante
    “La cattiva matrona, la guastafeste, la perfida moglie, io non posso vederla che coi miei occhi di bambina: eccola, rifulgente nella sua stola ricamata, nelle sue pietre preziose, nobile e bella come una Nostra Signora orientale. I suoi cattivi pensieri le splendono intorno al capo come un’aureola; e i desideri turpi e disumani che la trafiggono mi paiono spade sante.”
    Elsa Morante, Menzogna e sortilegio

  • #9
    Ann Leckie
    “Thoughts are ephemeral, they evaporate in the moment they occur, unless they are given action and material form. Wishes and intentions, the same. Meaningless, unless they impel you to one choice or another, some deed or course of action, however insignificant. Thoughts that lead to action can be dangerous. Thoughts that do not, mean less than nothing.”
    Ann Leckie, Ancillary Justice

  • #10
    Tamsyn Muir
    “I KISSED YOU AND LATER I WOULD KISS HIM TOO BEFORE I UNDERSTOOD WHAT YOU WERE, AND ALL THREE OF US LIVED TO REGRET IT—BUT WHEN I AM IN HEAVEN I WILL REMEMBER YOUR MOUTH, AND WHEN YOU ROAST DOWN IN HELL I THINK YOU WILL REMEMBER MINE”
    Tamsyn Muir, Harrow the Ninth



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