4,346 books
—
26,159 voters
Robert
https://www.goodreads.com/rand0
The Italians greeted us with cries of Bambino! Bambino! Buon giorno bambino! and we responded by shrieking Bambino! Bambino! Il Duce morte! Finito il Duce! Sometimes we shouted Viva Pinocchio! and from beyond the fences and the barriers of
...more
“Granny Weatherwax looked out at the multi-layered, silvery world.
“Where am I?”
INSIDE THE MIRROR.
“Am I dead?”
THE ANSWER TO THAT, said Death, IS SOMEWHERE BETWEEN NO AND YES.
Esme turned, and a billion figures turned with her.
“When can I get out?”
WHEN YOU FIND THE ONE THAT’S REAL.
“Is this a trick question?”
NO.
Granny looked down at herself.
“This one,” she said.”
― Witches Abroad
“Where am I?”
INSIDE THE MIRROR.
“Am I dead?”
THE ANSWER TO THAT, said Death, IS SOMEWHERE BETWEEN NO AND YES.
Esme turned, and a billion figures turned with her.
“When can I get out?”
WHEN YOU FIND THE ONE THAT’S REAL.
“Is this a trick question?”
NO.
Granny looked down at herself.
“This one,” she said.”
― Witches Abroad
“The Catholic alpha male abstains from sexual intercourse and childcare even though there is no genetic or ecological reason for him to do so.”
― Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind
― Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind
“A typical forager 30,000 years ago had access to only one type of sweet food – ripe fruit. If a Stone Age woman came across a tree groaning with figs, the most sensible thing to do was to eat as many of them as she could on the spot, before the local baboon band picked the tree bare. The instinct to gorge on high-calorie food was hard-wired into our genes. Today we may be living in high-rise apartments with over-stuffed refrigerators, but our DNA still thinks we are in the savannah. That’s what makes some of us spoon down an entire tub of Ben & Jerry’s when we find one in the freezer and wash it down with a jumbo Coke.”
― Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind
― Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind
“We’re really just unwitting pawns playing out a sinister predetermined plan laid out by the toaster.”
― Totally Random: Why Nobody Understands Quantum Mechanics
― Totally Random: Why Nobody Understands Quantum Mechanics
“My grandfather Alexander and my grandmother Shlomit, with my father and his elder brother David, on the other hand, did not go to Palestine even though they were also ardent Zionists: the conditions of life there seemed too Asiatic to them, so they went to Vilna, the capital of Lithuania, and
arrived there only in 1933, by which time, as it turned out, anti-Semitism in Vilna had grown to the point of violence against Jewish students. My Uncle David especially was a confirmed European, at a time when, it seems, no one else in Europe was, apart from the members of my family and other
Jews like them. Everyone else turns out to have been Pan-Slavic, PanGermanic, or simply Latvian, Bulgarian, Irish, or Slovak patriots. The only Europeans in the whole of Europe in the 1920s and 1930s were the Jews.
My father always used to say: In Czechoslovakia there are three nations, the
Czechs, the Slovaks, and the Czecho-Slovaks, i.e., the Jews; in Yugoslavia
there are Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, and Montenegrines, but, even there, there
lives a group of unmistakable Yugoslavs; and even in Stalin’s empire there
are Russians, there are Ukrainians, and there are Uzbeks and Chukchis and
Tatars, and among them are our brethren, the only real members of a Soviet
nation.”
― A Tale of Love and Darkness
arrived there only in 1933, by which time, as it turned out, anti-Semitism in Vilna had grown to the point of violence against Jewish students. My Uncle David especially was a confirmed European, at a time when, it seems, no one else in Europe was, apart from the members of my family and other
Jews like them. Everyone else turns out to have been Pan-Slavic, PanGermanic, or simply Latvian, Bulgarian, Irish, or Slovak patriots. The only Europeans in the whole of Europe in the 1920s and 1930s were the Jews.
My father always used to say: In Czechoslovakia there are three nations, the
Czechs, the Slovaks, and the Czecho-Slovaks, i.e., the Jews; in Yugoslavia
there are Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, and Montenegrines, but, even there, there
lives a group of unmistakable Yugoslavs; and even in Stalin’s empire there
are Russians, there are Ukrainians, and there are Uzbeks and Chukchis and
Tatars, and among them are our brethren, the only real members of a Soviet
nation.”
― A Tale of Love and Darkness
Goodreads Librarians Group
— 316253 members
— last activity 1 minute ago
Goodreads Librarians are volunteers who help ensure the accuracy of information about books and authors in the Goodreads' catalog. The Goodreads Libra ...more
Robert’s 2025 Year in Books
Take a look at Robert’s Year in Books, including some fun facts about their reading.
More friends…
Favorite Genres
Polls voted on by Robert
Lists liked by Robert













































