Rosey Waters > Rosey's Quotes

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  • #1
    Rebecca Solnit
    “Too many writers cannot come to terms with the ways in which the past, like the future, is dark. There is so much we don't know, and to write truthfully about a life, your own or your mother's, or a celebrated figure's, an event, a crisis, another culture is to engage repeatedly with those patches of darkness, those nights of history, those places of unknowning. They tell us that there are limits to knowledge, that there are essential mysteries, starting with the notion that we know just what someone thought or felt in the absence of exact information.”
    Rebecca Solnit

  • #2
    Dan Wells
    “Nobody as a destiny. I mean, nobody has some kind of inescapable path for their life. This mug was made from clay, and that clay could have been anything at all until somebody made it into a mug. People aren't mugs, we are clay. Living, breathing, thinking, feeling clay, and we can shape ourselves into anything we want, and we keep shaping ourselves all our lives, getting better and better at whatever we want to be, and when we want to be something else we just smooth out the clay and start over. Your lack of 'purpose' is the single best thing about you, because it means you can be whatever you want.”
    Dan Wells, Ruins

  • #3
    Dan Wells
    “If my life had no meaning, there was no reason not to end it."
    "So you ended it?"
    "So I gave it meaning.”
    Dan Wells, Ruins

  • #4
    Laini Taylor
    “Anyone who takes on my sister," he had postured once, all puffed-out bravado, "will have to deal with ...my sister." And then he'd dived behind her and cowered.”
    Laini Taylor, Dreams of Gods & Monsters

  • #5
    Laini Taylor
    “Scientist and smart fellow learner-of-stuff, want to do samurai-monster training with us? We intend to become dangerous.”
    Laini Taylor, Dreams of Gods & Monsters

  • #6
    Laini Taylor
    “It's not like there's a law against flying."

    "Yes there is. The law of gravity.”
    Laini Taylor, Daughter of Smoke & Bone

  • #7
    Laini Taylor
    “She craved a presence beside her, solid. Fingertips light at the nape of her neck and a voice meeting hers in the dark. Someone who would wait with an umbrella to walk her home in the rain, and smile like sunshine when he saw her coming. Who would dance with her on her balcony, keep his promises and know her secrets, and make a tiny world wherever he was, with just her and his arms and his whisper and her trust.”
    Laini Taylor, Daughter of Smoke & Bone
    tags: love

  • #8
    Laini Taylor
    “You are a conniving, deceitful hussy. I stand in awe."
    "You're sitting."
    "I sit in awe.”
    Laini Taylor, Dreams of Gods & Monsters

  • #9
    Laini Taylor
    “People with secrets shouldn’t make enemies.

    People with destinies shouldn’t make plans.”
    Laini Taylor, Dreams of Gods & Monsters

  • #10
    Laini Taylor
    “Liraz was special. Specially antisocial. Spectacularly, even.”
    Laini Taylor, Dreams of Gods & Monsters

  • #11
    Laini Taylor
    “We are the beginning ... We always have been. This time, let it be more than a beginning.”
    Laini Taylor, Dreams of Gods & Monsters

  • #12
    Laini Taylor
    “[She] had heard it said that there was only one emotion which, in recollection, was capable of resurrecting the full immediacy and power of the original—one emotion that time could never fade, and that would drag you back any number of years into the pure, undiluted feeling, as if you were living it anew. It wasn’t love… and it wasn’t hate, or anger, or happiness, or even grief. Memories of those were but echoes of the true feeling.

    It was shame. Shame never faded.”
    Laini Taylor, Dreams of Gods & Monsters
    tags: shame, ya

  • #13
    Laini Taylor
    “Liraz snorted, caught off guard, and the tension between them ebbed away. "I'm sorry if my almost dying interrupted your almost kissing.”
    Laini Taylor, Dreams of Gods & Monsters
    tags: liraz

  • #14
    Daryl Gregory
    “Pretending to be normal made life so difficult.”
    Daryl Gregory, We Are All Completely Fine

  • #15
    Frances Hardinge
    “Have you ever seen an anthill?" he said at last. "A machine of tiny marchers. Too much motion, you cannot make out the aims in it. But take something away from that anthill – a stone, a leaf, a dead caterpillar – and the ants scurry. You see which ones you have sabotaged, which ones are disturbed and scuttling to prop something in its place. That is what I do. That is kleptomancy. Divination by theft. Find something that is important, something on which you suspect many plans rely, and remove it. Then sit and watch. That’s why stealing you will help, even if you know nothing. Right now, the people who want to use you and the people who want you dead will be in a race to find you before the other does. People in a hurry often show their hand by mistake.”
    Frances Hardinge, A Face Like Glass

  • #16
    Eugenia Cheng
    “Instead of being afraid of that darkness, we should bring everyone to the edge of it and say: Look! Here is an area that needs illumination Bring fire, torches, candles -- anything you can think of that will cast light. Then we can lay down our foundations and build our great buildings, cure diseases, invent fabulous new machines, and whatever else we think the human race should be doing. But first of all we need some light.”
    Eugenia Cheng

  • #17
    Eugenia Cheng
    “Thinking about more and more abstract concepts is a bit like the high jump. You have to get yourself over a progressively higher and higher bar, and if nobody explains how to do it, you will keep knocking the bar off and want to give up.”
    Eugenia Cheng, How to Bake Pi: An Edible Exploration of the Mathematics of Mathematics

  • #18
    Douglas Adams
    “There is a theory which states that if ever anyone discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable.

    There is another theory which states that this has already happened.”
    Douglas Adams, The Restaurant at the End of the Universe

  • #19
    Kendare Blake
    “He was a god, he said, and always had been. Or at least, that was what they used to be called. What they were now, he didn’t know. It seemed like the wrong word when he was so limited, so much less than he’d been before.”
    Kendare Blake, Antigoddess

  • #20
    Kiersten White
    “I don't dislike them, nor do I like them. I've never understood why one must love children simply because they are children. I don't love people because they are people; in fact, I rarely like any people at all. If a child is somehow deserving of admiration, I certainly won't deny it, but why hand it out like candy on Queen's Day?”
    Kiersten White, Illusions of Fate

  • #21
    Douglas Adams
    “I love deadlines. I love the whooshing noise they make as they go by.”
    Douglas Adams, The Salmon of Doubt: Hitchhiking the Galaxy One Last Time

  • #22
    Douglas Adams
    “Isn't it enough to see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are fairies at the bottom of it too?”
    Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy

  • #23
    Douglas Adams
    “You know," said Arthur, "it's at times like this, when I'm trapped in a Vogon airlock with a man from Betelgeuse, and about to die of asphyxiation in deep space that I really wish I'd listened to what my mother told me when I was young."
    "Why, what did she tell you?"
    "I don't know, I didn't listen.”
    Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy

  • #24
    Douglas Adams
    “I've come up with a set of rules that describe our reactions to technologies:
    1. Anything that is in the world when you’re born is normal and ordinary and is just a natural part of the way the world works.
    2. Anything that's invented between when you’re fifteen and thirty-five is new and exciting and revolutionary and you can probably get a career in it.
    3. Anything invented after you're thirty-five is against the natural order of things.”
    Douglas Adams, The Salmon of Doubt: Hitchhiking the Galaxy One Last Time

  • #25
    McKelle George
    “She let him do it, not only because she came out looking all right in his story, not a clock-throwing ruin of a girl, but also because Benedick's talking about her as if she were already one of them made her one of them. Words. What a tricky, tangled science.”
    McKelle George, Speak Easy, Speak Love



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