The Dogs of March Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
The Dogs of March (Darby Chronicles Book 1) The Dogs of March by Ernest Hebert
450 ratings, 3.54 average rating, 51 reviews
The Dogs of March Quotes Showing 1-7 of 7
“One repeated the same old mistakes. Each of us has a blind spot in his thinking that defeats him time and again against all teaching and experience and pain.”
Ernest Hebert, The Dogs of March
“Female creatures owned the world, Howard thought. The earth itself was female. The shop was female. The females knew everything of beauty and desolation—he”
Ernest Hebert, The Dogs of March
“Female anger was different. It was rooted in wounds to the soul; it was anger at God.”
Ernest Hebert, The Dogs of March
“He liked the woods and the iron-cold air, and he liked snapping the rifle to his shoulder as the game came into view. But he did not like the killing, the thing lying there, bewildered, eyes open.”
Ernest Hebert, The Dogs of March
“I just want to stop the cycle of killing,” Freddy said. “It isn’t necessary. It isn’t even necessary that people eat meat. And it certainly isn’t necessary that people make war on people. I’m doing my small part to change the species.” “Umm,” said Howard.”
Ernest Hebert, The Dogs of March
“The talk of the educated, the talk in books, confused him, as if on purpose, as if education itself were a conspiracy to make certain that the knowledge of the world was unavailable to him. And yet he believed in his own intelligence, took pride in the way his thoughts came together like the cocking of a revolver. But the words were never there to express the thoughts, and so his private stock of knowledge was forever his secret, sealed inside by his ignorance.”
Ernest Hebert, The Dogs of March
“But then, why smile? He could not understand why some people smiled when they weren’t pleased, or how they’d learned such a smile, or what it was for.”
Ernest Hebert, The Dogs of March