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Odd Interlude (Odd Thomas, #4.5) Odd Interlude by Dean Koontz
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Odd Interlude Quotes Showing 1-30 of 55
“My life has a mysterious purpose that I don't understand, and day by day, conflict by conflict, I learn by going where I have to go.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“Yet the human heart is disheartened by the most unreasonable self-judgments, because even when we take on giants, we too often confuse failure with fault, which I know too well. The only way back from such a bleak despondency is to shape humiliation into humility, to strive always to triumph over the darkness while never forgetting that the honor and the beauty are more in striving than in winning. When triumph at last comes, our efforts alone could not have won the day without that grace which surpasses all understanding and which will, if we allow it, imbue our lives with meaning.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“Loyal companions are an unequaled grace, stanching fear before it bleeds you numb, a reliable antidote for creeping despair.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“We don't have time for such uncertainty because it reliably breeds indecision, and indecision is one of the mothers of failure.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“She is a girl who feels things strongly, and though cynics might mock her for that, I never will, as it is perhaps the best of graces: to feel deeply, to care profoundly.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“Like all of us, I was born for joy. This broken world, however, breaks most of us, grinding relentlessly on its metaled tracks.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“Waiting is one of the things that humans beings cannot do well, though it is one of the essential things we must do successfully if we are to know happiness. We are impatient for the future and try to craft it with our own powers, but the future will come as it comes and will not be hurried. If we are good at waiting, we discover that what we wanted of the future, in our impatience, is no longer what we want, that waiting has brought wisdom. I have become good at waiting, as I wait to see what action or sacrifice is wanted of me, wait to discover where I must go next, and wait for the day when the fortuneteller's promise will be fulfilled. Hope, love, and faith are in the waiting.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“Be you and only you, which means be you and all the people you have loved...”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“We are fallen in a broken world, and one thing that occurs to me is that after thousands of years, when we think of fallen angels, we think of them as we always have: busy spreading misery on Earth. But the universe in its immensity is nevertheless of a piece, and what applies at one end of it applies at the other. No doubt misery, like happiness and hope, is found throughout the stars.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“Yet the human heart is disheartened by the most unreasonable self-judgments, because even when we take on giants, we too often confuse failure with fault, which I know too well. The only way back from such a bleak despondency is to shape humiliation into humility, to strive always to triumph over the darkness while never forgetting that the honor and the beauty are more in the striving than in the winning. When triumph at last comes, our efforts alone could not have won the day without that grace which surpasses all understanding and which will, if we allow it, imbue our lives with meaning. In the learning of that simple”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“Melancholy can be seductive when it’s twined with self-pity.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“Not many years ago, nearly 100 percent of people who thought they were being constantly watched were certifiable paranoids. But recently it was revealed that, in the name of public safety, Homeland Security and more than a hundred other local, state, and federal agencies are operating aerial surveillance drones of the kind previously used only on foreign battlefields— at low altitudes outside the authority of air-traffic control. Soon, the bigger worry will not be that, as you walk your dog, you are secretly being watched but that the rapidly proliferating drones will begin colliding with one another and with passenger aircraft, and that you’ll be killed by the plummeting drone that was monitoring you to be sure that you picked up Fido’s poop in a federally approved pet-waste bag.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
tags: drones
“Waiting is one of the things that human beings cannot do well, though it is one of the essential things we must do successfully if we are to know happiness. We are impatient for the future and try to craft it with our own powers, but the future will come as it comes and will not be hurried. If we are good at waiting, we discover that what we wanted of the future, in our impatience, is no longer what we want, that waiting has brought wisdom.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“But the universe in its immensity is nevertheless of a piece, and what applies at one end of it applies at the other. No doubt misery, like happiness and hope, is found throughout the stars.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“In my bones, I know that I am not long for this world.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“My only armor is my belief that life has meaning...”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“She has suffered so much, and that sorrows me. But she has been strong in the face of unthinkable adversity, and that inspires me.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“Hope, love, and faith are in the waiting”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“Waiting is one of the things that human beings cannot do well, though it is one of the essential things we must do successfully if we are to know happiness. We are impatient for the future and try to craft it with our own powers, but the future will come as it comes and will not be hurried.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“each of us has his or her role in life, and if we know ourselves well enough to understand what that role is, we will be happy doing nothing else but what we can do best.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“My only armor is my belief that life has meaning and that, when my last sun has set and my last moon has risen, when the dawn comes that marks the moment when I am born with the dead, there will be mercy.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“behind every closed door might wait a thief of minds and a collector of souls.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“I am getting the chaos I wanted. The problem is, you can switch the chaos on, but chaos itself is in control of the off switch.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“so I start reciting a couple of Shel Silverstein poems I’ve memorized, and I verse myself all the way across the room to a big round opening you could drive a Mack truck through if you knew how to drive, which I don’t.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“She is a girl who feels things strongly, and though cynics might mock her for that, I never will, as it is perhaps the best of graces: the feel deeply, to care profoundly.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“We are impatient for the future and try to craft it with our own powers, but the future will come as it comes and will not be hurried. If we are good at waiting, we discover that what we wanted of the future, in our impatience, is no longer what we want, that waiting has brought wisdom.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“Ed, once called Aladdin, is the first artificial intelligence I’ve ever known. Maybe if Harry can kill Hiskott and if then I live long enough to see the world become the total science-fiction theme park it seems to be headed toward, I’ll probably know dozens of them one day. Let me tell you, if they’re all as nice as Ed has turned out to be, that’s okay with me.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“Earlier, she asked if I would die for her. Without hesitation, I said that I would—and meant it. I don’t understand either my reaction to her or the source of her power. She is something other than she appears to be. She tells me that I already know what she is and that I only need to accept the knowledge that I already possess.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“I have known her less than twenty-four hours. And the longer I know her, the more she mystifies me. She is perhaps eighteen, almost four years younger than me, but she seems much older. The things she says are often cryptic, though I feel that the meaning would be clear to me if I were wiser than I am.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude
“Annamaria insists that mere hours earlier, I saved entire cities, sparing many hundreds of thousands from nuclear terrorism. Even if that is most likely true, I feel as though, in the process, I have forfeited a piece of my soul.”
Dean Koontz, Odd Interlude

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