The Year of Fog Quotes
The Year of Fog
by
Michelle Richmond16,643 ratings, 3.47 average rating, 2,600 reviews
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The Year of Fog Quotes
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“We take pictures because we can't accept that everything passes, we can't accept that the repetition of a moment is an impossibility. We wage a monotonous war against our own impending deaths, against time that turns children into that other, lesser species: adults. We take pictures because we know we will forget. We will forget the week, the day, the hour. We will forget when we were happiest. We take pictures out of pride, a desire to have the best of ourselve preserved. We fear that we will die and others will not know we lived.”
― The Year of Fog
― The Year of Fog
“...You find a way, somehow to get through the most horrible things, things you think would kill you. You find a way and you move through the days, one by one, in shock, in despair, but you move. The days pass, one after the other, and you go along with them - occasionally stunned, and not entirely relieved, to find that you are still alive.”
― The Year of Fog
― The Year of Fog
“Some people have a gift for making you feel okay, just by the fact of their presence.”
― The Year of Fog
― The Year of Fog
“I have a hunch that our obsession with photography arises from an unspoken pessimism; it is our nature to believe the good things will not last. . . But photos provide a false sense of security> like our flawed memory, they are guaranteed to fade. . . . We take photographs in order to remember, but it is in the nature of a photograph to forget (pg 157)”
― The Year of Fog
― The Year of Fog
“As the years progress and we experience more and more, the mini-narratives that make up our lives are distorted, corrupted, so that every one of us is left with a false history, a self-created fiction about the live we have led. pg 163”
― The Year of Fog
― The Year of Fog
“Tragedy, in its full and life-altering form, happened to other people.”
― The Year of Fog
― The Year of Fog
“56 percent of learned information is forgotten within an hour of being encoded. By the time one day has passed, another 10 percent is gone. A month after the information is learned, 80 percent of it has vanished. How”
― The Year of Fog: A Novel
― The Year of Fog: A Novel
“I had never really thought of children as people, just as mysterious and needy creatures on their way to something greater.”
― The Year of Fog: A Novel
― The Year of Fog: A Novel
