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  • #1
    Lemony Snicket
    “To Beatrice-
    darling, dearest, dead.”
    Lemony Snicket, The Bad Beginning

  • #2
    Jonathan Safran Foer
    “Sometimes I can hear my bones straining under the weight of all the lives I'm not living.”
    Jonathan Safran Foer, Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close

  • #3
    Frank Herbert
    “Do you wrestle with dreams?
    Do you contend with shadows?
    Do you move in a kind of sleep?
    Time has slipped away.
    Your life is stolen.
    You tarried with trifles,
    Victim of your folly.”
    Frank Herbert, Dune

  • #4
    Steven Moffat
    “Good is good in the final hour, in the deepest pit – without hope, without witness, without reward. Virtue is only virtue in extremis.”
    Steven Moffat

  • #5
    Steven Moffat
    “Never run when you're scared. Rule 7.”
    Steven Moffat

  • #6
    Chuck Palahniuk
    “It's so hard to forget pain, but it's even harder to remember sweetness. We have no scar to show for happiness. We learn so little from peace.”
    Chuck Palahniuk, Diary

  • #7
    Emily St. John Mandel
    “Survival is insufficient.”
    Emily St. John Mandel, Station Eleven

  • #8
    Emily St. John Mandel
    “I repent nothing. A line remembered from the fog of the Internet. I am heartless, she thinks, but she knows even through her guilt that this isn't true. She knows there are traps everywhere that can make her cry, she knows the way she dies a little every time someone asks her for change and she doesn't give it to them means that she's too soft for this world or perhaps just for this city, she feels so small here. There are tears in her eyes now. Miranda is a person with very few certainties, but one of them is that only the dishonorable leave when things get difficult.”
    Emily St. John Mandel, Station Eleven

  • #9
    Emily St. John Mandel
    “Hell is the absence of the people you long for.”
    Emily St. John Mandel, Station Eleven

  • #10
    “You know what I hate most about you, Marion? You're consistently, eternally wrong… and yet you're still alive. All those lost battles, every year of that entire lost war, but somehow you always cobble together enough dumb luck to walk away unscathed. The eternal sole survivor. You don't deserve that kind of luck. Nobody does.”
    qntm, There Is No Antimemetics Division

  • #11
    “There is an invisible monster which follows me around and likes to eat my memories," Marion explains, patiently. "SCP-4987. Don't look it up, it's not there. I've learned to manage with it. It's like a demanding pet. I produce tasty memories on purpose so it doesn't eat something important, like my passwords or how to make coffee.”
    qntm, There Is No Antimemetics Division

  • #12
    “You spoke four languages," Grey tells him. "One now, and soon zero. Too huge an intellect to specialise, your education was a fusion of biochemistry and comparative literature. You felt as if you'd die if you couldn't find more foreign thoughts to cram into your head. You've been all over the world, hungry, and every country you've ever been to was like landing on another planet. You toy with anthropology, but there's too much world for one human race to ever understand, let alone one human. There's too much human race. We should pare it down.”
    qntm, There Is No Antimemetics Division

  • #13
    “I wrote an extremely interesting paper on this exact subject, Tim, perhaps you didn't read it when I gave you a copy last year. There is an unbelievably long sequence of quantum universe simulators down there. An infinite number of them, in fact. Each of them is identical and each believes itself to be the top layer. There was an exceedingly good chance that ours would turn out to be somewhere in the sequence rather than at the top.”
    qntm, I Don't Know Timmy, Being God is a Big Responsibility

  • #14
    Ocean Vuong
    “They say nothing lasts forever but they're just scared it will last longer than they can love it.”
    Ocean Vuong, On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous

  • #15
    Ocean Vuong
    “You once told me that the human eye is god's loneliest creation. How so much of the world passes through the pupil and still it holds nothing. The eye, alone in its socket, doesn't even know there's another one, just like it, an inch away, just as hungry, as empty.”
    Ocean Vuong, On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous

  • #16
    Ocean Vuong
    “Because the sunset, like survival, exists only on the verge of its own disappearing. To be gorgeous, you must first be seen, but to be seen allows you to be hunted.”
    Ocean Vuong, On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous

  • #17
    Ocean Vuong
    “In Vietnamese, the word for missing someone and remembering them is the same: nhớ. Sometimes, when you ask me over the phone, Có nhớ mẹ không? I flinch, thinking you meant, Do you remember me?

    I miss you more than I remember you.”
    Ocean Vuong, On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous

  • #18
    Ocean Vuong
    “I am writing because they told me to never start a sentence with because. But I wasn't trying to make a sentence—I was trying to break free. Because freedom, I am told, is nothing but the distance between the hunter and its prey.”
    Ocean Vuong, On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous

  • #19
    Ocean Vuong
    “Is that what art is? To be touched thinking what we feel is ours when, in the end, it was someone else, in longing, who finds us?”
    Ocean Vuong, On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous

  • #20
    Ted Chiang
    “unconditional love asks nothing, not even that it be returned.”
    Ted Chiang, Stories of Your Life and Others

  • #21
    Ted Chiang
    “People are made of stories. Our memories are not the impartial accumulation of every second we’ve lived; they’re the narrative that we assembled out of selected moments.”
    Ted Chiang, The Best of Subterranean

  • #22
    Ted Chiang
    “I understand the mechanism of my own thinking. I know precisely how I know, and my understanding is recursive. I understand the infinite regress of this self-knowing, not by proceeding step by step endlessly, but by apprehending the limit. The nature of recursive cognition is clear to me. A new meaning of the term "self-aware."

    Fiat logos. I know my mind in terms of a language more expressive than any I'd previously imagined. Like God creating order from chaos with an utterance, I make myself anew with this language. It is meta-self-descriptive and self-editing; not only can it describe thought, it can describe and modify its own operations as well, at all levels. What Gödel would have given to see this language, where modifying a statement causes the entire grammar to be adjusted.

    With this language, I can see how my mind is operating. I don't pretend to see my own neurons firing; such claims belong to John Lilly and his LSD experiments of the sixties. What I can do is perceive the gestalts; I see the mental structures forming, interacting. I see myself thinking, and I see the equations that describe my thinking, and I see myself comprehending the equations, and I see how the equations describe their being comprehended.

    I know how they make up my thoughts.

    These thoughts.”
    Ted Chiang, Stories of Your Life and Others

  • #23
    Martha Wells
    “I could have become a mass murderer after I hacked my governor module, but then I realized I could access the combined feed of entertainment channels carried on the company satellites. It had been well over 35,000 hours or so since then, with still not much murdering, but probably, I don't know, a little under 35,000 hours of movies, serials, books, plays, and music consumed. As a heartless killing machine, I was a terrible failure.”
    Martha Wells, All Systems Red

  • #24
    Martha Wells
    “Yes, talk to Murderbot about its feelings. The idea was so painful I dropped to 97 percent efficiency. I’d rather climb back into Hostile One’s mouth.”
    Martha Wells, All Systems Red

  • #25
    Martha Wells
    “You may have noticed that when I do manage to care, I’m a pessimist.”
    Martha Wells, All Systems Red

  • #26
    Martha Wells
    “I hate caring about stuff. But apparently once you start, you can't just stop.”
    Martha Wells, Rogue Protocol

  • #27
    Martha Wells
    “Young humans can be impulsive. The trick is keeping them around long enough to become old humans.”
    Martha Wells, Artificial Condition

  • #28
    Martha Wells
    “Who knew being a heartless killing machine would present so many moral dilemmas. (Yes, that was sarcasm.)”
    Martha Wells, Rogue Protocol

  • #29
    Martha Wells
    “I don’t want to be human.”

    Dr. Mensah said, “That’s not an attitude a lot of humans are going to understand. We tend to think that because a bot or a construct looks human, its ultimate goal would be to become human.”

    “That’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard.”
    Martha Wells, Exit Strategy

  • #30
    Martha Wells
    “I was depressed this morning. I’d tried watching some new serials last night and even they couldn’t distract me; reality was too intrusive.”
    Martha Wells, All Systems Red



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