Fool on the Hill Quotes

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Fool on the Hill Fool on the Hill by Matt Ruff
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Fool on the Hill Quotes Showing 1-6 of 6
“George sat on his porch, and drank his Coke and made daydreams out of the rain. He wondered about the book he would write this year, and he wondered - not too desperately - whether love would find him at last and let him rest for a time. But he smiled all the while he was thinking about it, because at the core he was happy enough just to be alive and watching the storm, and this one thing made him special.”
Matt Ruff, Fool on the Hill
“April, she had died. April could still be a very cold month in Ithaca, though it was certainly not the best month for dying of exposure. A depressed person would have a better bet walking along the edge of one of the gorges and “accidentally” falling in. Of course the man Jessop had done neither; hand-making his daughter’s tombstone had probably kept him too occupied to even consider suicide. Yes. That was it; that was the key. An act of creation in the face of loss.”
Matt Ruff, Fool on the Hill: A Novel
“You made love to a dream. Have I ever lied to you, George? Then remember what I told you: Whoever you love will be just like me. Any woman seen through love’s eyes is as perfect as you thought me to be.” “No,” George said. “There’s no one like you.” “They’re all like me, George, if you see with your heart. But some of them stay.”
Matt Ruff, Fool on the Hill: A Novel
“It was perfect. I mean . . . not that anything really happened.” “Oh, George, it’s not how much you do, it’s what you feel while you’re doing it. You know that. But do you know the real truth?” “No, What?” “The real truth is that whoever you love will be just like me, and not just in the fog. Understand?” “No.” “You will”
Matt Ruff, Fool on the Hill: A Novel
“Of course a certain number of scientists have to go mad, just to keep the tradition alive.”
Matt Ruff, Fool on the Hill
“Yet just as a classic heroic tale needs a Saint, an unabashedly White-Hatted and periodically naive champion of romantic love, so too it isn’t quite complete without that other, more dubious, good guy: The Black Knight.”
Matt Ruff, Fool on the Hill