The All-Night Sun Quotes

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The All-Night Sun The All-Night Sun by Diane Zinna
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The All-Night Sun Quotes Showing 1-9 of 9
“I was always the kind of person who hated to have her photograph taken, dreading that instant when the camera might catch me looking stupid or at a bad angle, reduced to one version of myself, someone thinking that's all I am. Something like death in a photo. A stranger might pick it up, and to them that's all you'll ever be, this moment you had no control over, that had no before and no afterward.”
Diane Zinna, The All-Night Sun
“Sometimes the rules only seem silly because you aren't able to see far enough ahead.”
Diane Zinna, The All-Night Sun
“When I was young, I used to think that if God was bearing witness to our lives, it was to record our names and the good and bad we'd done. But in that moment I had the feeling that if there was any book, it was a much bigger one, with all our stories, all the ones that I remembered and had forgotten, and not just what had transpired, but all the narratives there ever were, all the trajectories our lives could have taken, all our dreams come to fruition, all the bad decisions leading to good luck, all the sadness leading to a bursting open.
Maybe a true friendship is being able to hold, equally, all of those pieces.”
Diane Zinna, The All-Night Sun
“A word can be like a cellar door. Just a few steps and you're in a dark place.”
Diane Zinna, The All-Night Sun
“They told me how empty an accomplishment could feel when those you love aren't there to see it, to say well done...”
Diane Zinna, The All-Night Sun
“. . . love was holding all the pieces at the same time. And it's always true, whether we remember that or not. Perhaps because of that, though there are things we might forget, nothing is ever really lost.”
Diane Zinna, The All-Night Sun
“. . . my undercurrent was All is not lost. That was what I'd agreed to believe. That was my beating drum. And if my depression was a planet of crushing, continual rain, my faith was the forest that kept growing up despite it.”
Diane Zinna, The All-Night Sun
“Lying had become second nature in my adult life. It was a way to spare strangers difficult conversations. The lies only ever pertained to my own information, and nothing I said was ever that important; the lies only served to keep me smiling, to keep the conversations from going off the cliff of sympathy, to keep me from breaking down.”
Diane Zinna, The All-Night Sun
“A word can be like a cellar door. Just a few steps and you're in a dark place.”
Diane Zinna, The All-Night Sun