Summer Hours at the Robbers Library Quotes

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Summer Hours at the Robbers Library Summer Hours at the Robbers Library by Sue Halpern
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Summer Hours at the Robbers Library Quotes Showing 1-30 of 45
“But it's a little like that children's book, THE VELVETEEN RABBIT, but in reverse: if you're not loved for who you are, you cease to be real. Definitely for the other person, and maybe for yourself, too.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“But then I tell myself that it wasn't as if justice was going to be served no matter what I did. Justice didn't stand a chance. And I hate that. I hate that I stopped believing in things I didn't even know were matters of belief, like justice and fairness. Or honesty. Or the promises people make to each other. Of all the things Cal took from me, that's when I think I miss the most: the apparently naïve belief that you kept your promises. You know what the prosecutor told me? ;Everyone cheats,' as if that was supposed to make it all right.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“It's stupid, really," I began again. "But it was this thing I read someplace, and it really got to me. It said that a dictionary is every book ever written and every book that will be written, just in a different order. And it seemed magical. You could own every book just by owning one book. I loved that. And I just had to have it,”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“I realize no one thinks being a librarian is as awesome as being a neurosurgeon, but I always thought I was doing something valuable, putting books in the hands of readers. Books can save lives, too. I really believe that.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“What you're thinking of as the end of the story now, is only the end of the chapter.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
tags: life
“Do you stop reading a book because you don't want to watch the characters you like turn out to be unlikable, or the ones with which you identify denied the happy ending you believe they deserve?”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“Somewhere in the unfolding story, something is going to happen that will change everything that happens after it.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
tags: life
“I don't think she's being mysterious on purpose. It's like she can't help it. She's not shy--she'll talk to anyone--and she's not exactly distant, but even so, she's unreachable, as if there's an invisible fence around her, or a force field the repels whatever gets too close.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“I think it's possible that when you think that the future might bring great sadness, you become more generous that you ever has been before, so you can carry other people's happiness with you.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
tags: coping
“Trauma is not just one thing.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
tags: trauma
“Freedom, he was learning, was not a set point, like the temperature at which water freezes, but something mutable, a moving target.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“Everyone's life is an unfolding story, and all stories have good guys and bad guys, and all stories have conflicts and resolutions, and all stories--if they are interesting--have drama.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
tags: drama
“And most, like me, were drawn to the miracle of the blank page and how, when seeded with letters, it blossomed into words and sentences and paragraphs and stories.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
tags: books
“Generally, by the time you are Real, most of your hair has been loved off, and your eyes drop out and you get loose in the joints and very shabby. But these things don’t matter at all, because once you are Real you can’t be ugly, except to people who”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“The only completely consistent people are dead.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“Don't assume that what happens in our future invalidates what happened in our past.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“There was an end, and it colors everything, even the beginning.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“I no longer know that story. The narrator is unreliable.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“A dictionary is every book ever written and every book that will be written, just in a different order. And it seemed magical. You could own every book just by owning one book.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“And it dawned on me that one way to find out if someone is trustworthy is to read her a passage from one of your favorite books and see how she reacts.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“What you've got to understand is that you didn't lose your life. You lost the life you thought you were living. And those are two different things. You are alive. It may not feel like it, but you are. And part of being alive means experiencing loss. We lose things every day - I'm not talking about eyeglasses - yes, we lose those, too - I mean things like eyesight. Our eyesight diminishes over time, our hair falls out. That's natural. It's so natural that we chalk it up to inevitability. But that's loss. Loss is inevitable. It comes in many sizes. Yours is huge - don't think I'm discounting it. But the small, everyday losses help us deal with the big ones. It's muscle memory.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
tags: loss, pain
“People who don't think the rules apply to them, Kit was beginning to learn, are surprised and offended when others don't recognize and honor their exemption.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
tags: rules
“I already told you a ghost story," she said at last. "The one where the wife was invisible to the husband and the truth of the marriage was invisible to her.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“You know what I can't stand?" Kit said as they passed five carts of books that needed to be reshelved. "I can't stand the words "reading for pleasure." All these parents--most of whom haven't read a single book since high school, unless maybe they picked up THE DA VINCE CODE--drag their kids in here every summer and say, 'Find something to read for pleasure,' which just means that most of the time the message these kids are getting is that reading is not pleasurable. Do you see how that works? It's like reading is a punishment. I hate that.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“It was as if her mind were a theater where bad actors could be run off the stage by a pack of adorable, yelping dogs.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“One thing I can suggest is that when you start to go to a dark place, for you to consciously redirect your thoughts. Mind over mind. Make yourself think of something completely different. An image of something joyful or silly, and focus on that.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“Truthfully, she hated when people did this to her. Which, for a while, they did all the time, pretend they could reverse the darkness by spreading their pretend sunshine all over you. It is a basic human reflex, that came from the most basic part of the brain. Not the Neocortex or the limbic part, and was an expression of fear not empathy. You cannot take it personally, they want to say the right thing but knew there was no such thing and that sometimes, most times, it was better not to try.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“It said that a dictionary is every book ever written and every book that will be written, just in a different order. And it seemed magical. You could own every book just by owning one book. I loved that. And I just had to have it.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“stories are not just in books or movies. Everyone's life is an unfolding story, and all stories have good guys and bad guys, and all stories have conflicts and resolutions, and all stories--if they are interesting--have drama.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
“the truth was not, despite popular opinion, objective. "Your truth and my truth are not necessarily the same thing, and yet neither is false.”
Sue Halpern, Summer Hours at the Robbers Library

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