Warmth Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Warmth: Coming of Age at the End of Our World Warmth: Coming of Age at the End of Our World by Daniel Sherrell
783 ratings, 4.06 average rating, 150 reviews
Open Preview
Warmth Quotes Showing 1-4 of 4
“I no longer believe that grief and resistance are mutually exclusive: I think the former is necessary to the latter, that honest sorrow is perhaps the only thing that makes a real fight even possible. To mourn without fighting is to tap out at the exact moment we need to step in, but to fight without mourning is to grapple with a ghost, to try to stop something you've never actually realized.”
Daniel Sherrell, Warmth: Coming of Age at the End of Our World
“Everything we've consigned to the world of things, everything we've presumed dead, is revealing itself now to be in possession of a terrible agency, a higher-order control beyond what we ever could have imagined. Their inanimateness has been little more than a clever veil. They are autocrats at base, incapable of negotiation. The crust and the sky; the sludge, sea, and dust: these are are always have been the true subjects. It is we who are the objects now, intermediaries for their massive churn. And as we dig them up, they bury us—so slowly we barely notice.”
Daniel Sherrell, Warmth: Coming of Age at the End of Our World
“I knew that I loved you then, and that love could feel a little like fury.”
Daniel Sherrell, Warmth: Coming of Age at the End of Our World
tags: love
“Every march is an act of faith in this way: you have to trust your story will braid into history, even if you’ll never be able to tease out its thread.”
Daniel Sherrell, Warmth: Coming of Age at the End of Our World