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Emily St.John Mandel

  • yulyaisirjozhahas quoted2 months ago
    She hopes she isn’t as awkward to other people as she feels to herself.
  • Lunahas quoted7 months ago
    There is too much world
  • friends don't liehas quoted2 years ago
    All three caravans of the Traveling Symphony are labeled as such, THE TRAVELING SYMPHONY lettered in white on both sides, but the lead caravan carries an additional line of text: Because survival is insufficient.
  • Филипп Каретовhas quoted2 years ago
    he was dressed in one of those outfits that look casual at first glance but are in fact comprised entirely of coded signals
  • Филипп Каретовhas quoted2 years ago
    It is possible to disappear in the space between countries.
  • ClydeBunnyhas quotedlast year
    “I’m no expert, but I remember reading somewhere, every time you retrieve a memory, that act of retrieval, it corrupts the memory a little bit. Maybe changes it a little.”
  • ClydeBunnyhas quotedlast year
    I am holding hands with my mother. I am very small. We are in Caiette, picking mushrooms in the woods. A memory, but it’s a memory so vivid that there’s a feeling of time travel, of visiting the actual moment. What a pleasure to be here again! “Oh look, my lamb,” she says, stooping to pluck a fluted little orange shape from the dark earth, “this one is a chanterelle.”
  • ClydeBunnyhas quotedlast year
    I’m on the beach, not far from the pier where the mail boat comes in, and my mother is here. She’s sitting some distance away, on a driftwood log, hands folded on her lap, with an air of waiting calmly for an appointment. Her hair is still braided, she’s still thirty-six years old, still in the red cardigan she was wearing the day she disappeared. It was an accident, of course it was, she would never have left me on purpose. She has waited so long for me. She was always here. This was always home. She’s gazing at the ocean, at the waves on the shore, and she looks up in amazement when I say her name.
  • finalfadeouthas quoted7 months ago
    I think, as a species, we have a desire to believe that we’re living at the climax of the story. It’s a kind of narcissism. We want to believe that we’re uniquely important, that we’re living at the end of history, that now, after all these millennia of false alarms, now is finally the worst that it’s ever been, that finally we have reached the end of the world.
  • ClydeBunnyhas quotedlast year
    a kind of unspoiled quality, an air of having been cushioned from life’s sharper edges
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