Gorky Park Quotes

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Gorky Park (Arkady Renko, #1) Gorky Park by Martin Cruz Smith
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Gorky Park Quotes Showing 1-20 of 20
“Proust said that you could seduce any woman if you were willing to sit and listen to her complain until four in the morning.”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“Stalin gothic was not so much an architectural style as a form of worship. Elements of Greek, French, Chinese and Italian masterpieces had been thrown into the barbarian wagon and carted to Moscow and the Master Builder Himself, who had piled them one on the other into the cement towers and blazing torches of His rule, monstrous skyscrapers of ominous windows, mysterious crenellations and dizzying towers that led to the clouds, and yet still more rising spires surmounted by ruby stars that at night glowed like His eyes. After His death, His creations were more embarrassment than menace, too big for burial with Him, so they stood, one to each part of town, great brooding, semi-Oriental temples, not exorcised but used.”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“In an unjust society a man may violate laws for valid social or economic reasons. In a just society there are no valid reasons except mental illness.”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“Well, love was no fading violet; love was a weed that flourished in the dark. Has anyone ever explained it?”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“There are not many road signs in Russia, you know. He laughed. If you don't know where the road goes, you shouldn't be on it.”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“There are two kinds of vodka, good and very good.’ Who”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“These enemies of society are to be driven out of New York regardless of their constitutional rights.’ The”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“By definition prostitutes did not exist, because prostitution has been eliminated by the Revolution. Charges could be brought against them for spreading venereal disease, performing depraved acts or leading a nonproductive life, but by law there were no whores.”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“All nights should be so dark, all winters so warm, all headlights so dazzling. The”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“Two days ago, I was lunching at the Writers Union with the eminent historian Tomashevski. That's the sort of man you should know. Respected, charming, hasn't produced a piece of work in ten years. He has a system, which he explained to me. First, he submits an outline for a biography to the Academy to be absolutely sure his approach is consistent with Party policy. A crucial first step, as you'll see later. Now, the person he studies is always an important figure - that is, someone from Moscow - hence Tomashevski must do his Russian research close to home for two years. But this historical character also traveled, yes, lived for some years in Paris or London; hence Tomashevski must do the same, apply for and receive permission for foreign residence. Four years have passed. The Academy and the Party are rubbing their hands in anticipation of this seminal study of the important figure by the eminent Tomashevski. And now Tomashevski must retire to the solitude of a dacha outside Moscow to tend his garden and creatively brood over his cartons of research. Two more years pass in seminal thought. And just as Tomashevski is about to commit himself to paper, he checks with the Academy again only to learn that Party policy has totally about-faced; his hero is a traitor, and with regrets all around, Tomashevski must sacrifice his years of labor for the greater good. Naturally, they are only too happy to urge Tomashevski to start a new project, to plow under his grief with fresh labor. Tomashevski is now studying a very important historical figure who lived for some time in the South of France. He says there is always a bright future for Soviet historians, and I believe him.”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“Iamskoy was waiting behind his desk, baby-pink fingers laced on the desk top, his shaved head glistening with thought.”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“Now that he thought about it, he and Natasha had always been great friends, but never close.”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“Soldiers leaned slackly against the wall in a sleep so tangibly deep that the heroic mosaics of the ceiling overhead could have been their communal dream.”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“it used to be that whenever Russian émigrés arrived in America they would start a restaurant. They served wonderful food—beef Stroganov, chicken Kiev, paskha, blini and caviar, sturgeon in jelly. That was fifty years ago, though. The new émigrés can’t cook at all; they don’t even know what good food is. Communism has erased Russian cuisine. Now, there’s one of the great crimes.”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“There are not many road signs in Russia, you know.’ He laughed. ‘If you don’t know where the road goes, you shouldn’t be on it.'” — Arkady Renko from Gorky Park”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“Interrogation is largely a process of rebirth done in the clumsiest fashion possible, a system in which the midwife attempts to deliver the same baby a dozen times in a dozen different ways.”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“The decree against parasitism was originally formulated for Gypsies, then broad-mindedly expanded to include dissidents and all sorts of profiteers,”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“he never knows what he’s saying. He says everything, so he has to be right some of the time.”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“That’s why I tell the children not to chew gum. First it’s gum, then rock music, then marijuana and . . .”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park
“The chief investigator for Special Cases was a composite of the most ordinary features, a stencil of a man.”
Martin Cruz Smith, Gorky Park