Peculiarblend > Peculiarblend's Quotes

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  • #1
    Charles Bukowski
    “stay with the beer.

    beer is continuous blood.

    a continuous lover.”
    Charles Bukowski, Love Is a Dog from Hell

  • #2
    Charles Bukowski
    “there is always one woman to save you from another and as that woman saves you she makes ready to destroy”
    Charles Bukowski, Love Is a Dog from Hell

  • #3
    Charles Bukowski
    “there is a loneliness in this world so great that you can see it in the slow movement of the hands of a clock”
    Charles Bukowski, Love Is a Dog from Hell

  • #4
    Charles Bukowski
    “you boys can keep your virgins
    give me hot old women in high heels
    with asses that forgot to get old.”
    Charles Bukowski, Love Is a Dog from Hell

  • #5
    Judy Blume
    “Our finger prints don't fade from the lives we touch.”
    judy blume

  • #6
    Judy Blume
    “Snoring keeps the monsters away.”
    Judy Blume, Fudge-a-Mania

  • #7
    Judy Blume
    “The truth will make you odd.”
    Judy Blume

  • #8
    “I love walking into a bookstore. It's like all my friends are sitting on shelves, waving their pages at me.”
    Tahereh Mafi

  • #9
    Anna Bayes
    “The word 'teach' suddenly conveys a sense of menace that is foreign to me.”
    Anna Bayes, Ginny's Lesson

  • #10
    Nikolai Gogol
    “in his mind, nothing could be more delightful than to live in solitude, and enjoy the spectacle of nature, and sometimes read some book or other.”
    Nikolai Gogol, Dead Souls

  • #11
    Orhan Pamuk
    “The first thing I learned at school was that some people are idiots; the second thing I learned was that some are even worse.”
    Orhan Pamuk, Istanbul: Memories and the City

  • #12
    Jacquitta A. McManus
    “We are not defined by our mistakes, but how we react to them and the life journey we create despite of them.”
    Jacquitta A McManus

  • #13
    Salman Rushdie
    “People retreated behind their front doors into the hidden zone of their private, family worlds and when outsiders asked how things were they answered, Oh, everything’s going along just fine, not much to report, situation normal. But everyone secretly knew that behind that door things were rarely humdrum. More typically, all hell was breaking loose, as people dealt with their angry fathers, drunken mothers, resentful siblings, mad aunts, lecherous uncles and crumbling grandparents. The family was not the firm foundation upon which society rested, but stood at the dark chaotic heart of everything that ailed us. It was not normal, but surreal; not humdrum, but filled with event; not ordinary, but bizarre. He remembered with what excitement he had listened, at the age of twenty, to the Reith Lectures delivered on BBC Radio by Edmund Leach, the great anthropologist and interpreter of Claude Lévi-Strauss who, a year earlier, had succeeded Noel Annan as provost of King’s. “Far from being the basis of the good society,” Leach had said, “the family, with its narrow privacy and tawdry secrets, is the source of all our discontents.” Yes! he thought. Yes! That is a thing I also know. The families in the novels he later wrote would be explosive, operatic, arm-waving, exclamatory, wild. People who did not like his books would sometimes criticize these fictional families for being unrealistic—not “ordinary” enough. However, readers who did like his books said to him, “Those families are exactly like my family.”
    Salman Rushdie, Joseph Anton: A Memoir

  • #14
    Salman Rushdie
    “Where they burn books they will in the end burn people too.”
    Salman Rushdie, Joseph Anton: A Memoir

  • #15
    Salman Rushdie
    “When he resigned his boss thought he was asking for more money. 'No,' he said. 'I'm just going to try to be a full-time writer.' Oh, his boss said, you want a lot more money. 'No, really,' he said. 'This isn't a negotiation. I'm just giving you my thirty days' notice. Thirty-one days from now, I won't be coming in.' Hmm, his boss replied. I don't think we can give you as much money as that.”
    Salman Rushdie, Joseph Anton: A Memoir

  • #16
    Henry David Thoreau
    “If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away.
    It is not important that he should mature as soon as an apple-tree or
    an oak. Shall he turn his spring into summer?”
    Henry David Thoreau, Walden or, Life in the Woods

  • #17
    Sholom Aleichem
    “Life is a dream for the wise, a game for the fool, a comedy for the rich, a tragedy for the poor.”
    Sholem Aleichem
    tags: life

  • #18
    Sholom Aleichem
    “A bachelor is a man who comes to work each morning from a different direction.”
    Sholom Aleichem

  • #19
    Sholom Aleichem
    “I mention her name and the old pain returns. Forget her, you say? How can you forget a living human being?”
    Sholom Aleichem

  • #20
    Sholom Aleichem
    “And books -- she swallows like dumplings.”
    Sholem Aleichem, Selected Stories of Sholom Aleichem

  • #21
    Sholom Aleichem
    “There is nothing in the world, I tell you, so maddening as a person who doesn't answer when you abuse him. You shout and you scold, you are ready to burst a gut, and he stands there and smiles....”
    Sholem Aleichem, Tevye's Daughters: Collected Stories of Sholom Aleichem

  • #22
    Sholom Aleichem
    “Words were made only for babblers, women, and lawyers. Like Bismarck once said: “Words were given to us to hide our thoughts.”
    Sholem Aleichem, Happy New Year! and Other Stories

  • #23
    Arthur Golden
    “Grief is a most peculiar thing; we’re so helpless in the face of it. It’s like a window that will simply open of its own accord. The room grows cold, and we can do nothing but shiver. But it opens a little less each time, and a little less; and one day we wonder what has become of it.”
    Arthur Golden, Memoirs of a Geisha

  • #24
    Arthur Golden
    “I don't know when we'll see each other again or what the world will be like when we do. We may both have seen many horrible things. But I will think of you every time I need to be reminded that there is beauty and goodness in the world.”
    Arthur Golden, Memoirs of a Geisha

  • #25
    Arthur Golden
    “I had to wonder if men were so blinded by beauty that they would feel privileged to live their lives with an actual demon, so long as it was a beautiful demon.”
    Arthur Golden, Memoirs of a Geisha

  • #26
    Arthur Golden
    “Hopes are like hair ornaments. Girls want to wear too many of them. When they become old women they look silly wearing even one.”
    Arthur Golden, Memoirs of a Geisha

  • #27
    Arthur Golden
    “If a few minutes of suffering could make me so angry, what would years of it do? Even a stone can be worn down with enough rain.”
    Arthur Golden, Memoirs of a Geisha

  • #28
    Arthur Golden
    “I never seek to defeat the man I am fighting, " he explained. "I seek to defeat his confidence. A mind troubled by doubt cannot focus on the course to victory. Two men are equals - true equals - only when they both have equal confidence.”
    Arthur Golden, Memoirs of a Geisha

  • #29
    Arthur Golden
    “Water is powerful. It can wash away earth, put out fire, and even destroy iron.”
    Arthur Golden, Memoirs of a Geisha

  • #30
    Arthur Golden
    “From this experience, I understood the danger of focusing only on what isn't there. What if I came to the end of my life and realized that I'd spent every day watching for a man who would never come to me? What an unbearable sorrow it would be, to realize I'd never really tasted the things I'd eaten, or seen the places I'd been, because I'd thought of nothing but the Chairman even while my life was drifting away from me. And yet if I drew my thoughts back from him, what life would I have? I would be like a dancer who had practiced since childhood for a performance she would never give.”
    Arthur Golden, Memoirs of a Geisha



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