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George Saunders

A Swim in a Pond in the Rain

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  • Delon Eliehas quotedlast year
    The resistance in the stories is quiet, at a slant, and comes from perhaps the most radical idea of all: that every human being is worthy of attention and that the origins of every good and evil capability of the universe may be found by observing a single, even very humble, person and the turnings of his or her mind.
  • Sairy Romerohas quotedlast year
    One of the pleasures of this exercise is watching my students as they start to realize that, yes, wow, the director, Vittorio De Sica, really did take that much care. Every aspect of every frame has been carefully considered and lovingly used, and this is part of the reason the sequence moved them the first time they watched it. That is: De Sica was taking responsibility for every single thing in his film.

    Of course he was. Bicycle Thieves is a great work of art and De Sica is an artist, and that’s what an artist does: takes responsibility.
  • Sairy Romerohas quotedlast year
    How are we supposed to be living down here? What were we put here to accomplish? What should we value? What is truth, anyway, and how might we recognize it? How can we feel any peace when some people have everything and others have nothing? How are we supposed to live with joy in a world that seems to want us to love other people but then roughly separates us from them in the end, no matter what?

    (You know, those cheerful, Russian kinds of big questions.)
  • Sairy Romerohas quotedlast year
    resistance in the stories is quiet, at a slant, and comes from perhaps the most radical idea of all: that every human being is worthy of attention and that the origins of every good and evil capability of the universe may be found by observing a single, even very humble, person and the turnings of his or her mind.
  • Nathanielhas quoted2 years ago
    Once Gorky asked Tolstoy whether he agreed with an opinion Tolstoy had assigned to one of his characters.

    “Are you very anxious to know?” Tolstoy asked.

    “Very,” said Gorky.

    “Then I shan’t tell you,” said Tolstoy.
  • Nathanielhas quoted2 years ago
    Reconsideration is hard; it takes courage. We have to deny ourselves the comfort of always being the same person, one who arrived at an answer some time ago and has never had any reason to doubt it.
  • Nathanielhas quoted2 years ago
    But this quality is what we love him for now. In a world full of people who seem to know everything, passionately, based on little (often slanted) information, where certainty is often mistaken for power, what a relief it is to be in the company of someone confident enough to stay unsure (that is, perpetually curious).
  • Nathanielhas quoted2 years ago
    “My holy of holies,” he wrote, “is the human body, health, intelligence, talent, inspiration, love, and absolute freedom—freedom from violence and falsehood, no matter how the last two manifest themselves.”
  • Nathanielhas quoted2 years ago
    What I admire most about Chekhov is how free of agenda he seems on the page—interested in everything but not wedded to any fixed system of belief, willing to go wherever the data takes him. He was a doctor, and his approach to fiction feels lovingly diagnostic.
  • Nathanielhas quoted2 years ago
    “Gooseberries,” as we’re seeing, proceeds by a method of persistent self-contradiction. If one aspect of it seems to be expressing a certain view, a new aspect of it will appear and challenge that view.

    The story is not there to tell us what to think about happiness. It is there to help us think about it. It is, we might say, a structure to help us think.
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