Emily St.John Mandel

Sea of Tranquility

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  • 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
    When I wasn’t playing my violin in the airship terminal I liked to walk my dog in the streets between the towers. In those streets everyone moved faster than me, but what they didn’t know was that I had already moved too fast, too far, and wished to travel no further. I’ve been thinking a great deal about time and motion lately, about being a still point in the ceaseless rush.
  • ClydeBunnyhas quotedlast year
    What I didn’t tell him: I felt that without Talia I might disappear into thin air, out there by myself. Just me and the dog and the farm robots, day after day. Loneliness wasn’t a strong enough word for it. All that empty space. At night I sat on the porch with my dog, avoiding the silent house. Playing that game kids play, where you squint at the moon and half-convince yourself that you can see the brighter spots of the colonies on its surface. Distant over the fields, the lights of the city.
  • ClydeBunnyhas quotedlast year
    if definitive proof emerges that we’re living in a simulation, the correct response to that news will be So what. A life lived in a simulation is still a life.
  • ClydeBunnyhas quotedlast year
    “My personal belief is that we turn to postapocalyptic fiction not because we’re drawn to disaster, per se, but because we’re drawn to what we imagine might come next. We long secretly for a world with less technology in it.”
  • ClydeBunnyhas quotedlast year
    Is there an unease that’s specific to the sense of an invisible bureaucracy in motion around you?
  • ClydeBunnyhas quotedlast year
    Those are the worlds that end in our day-to-day lives, these stopped children, these annihilating losses,
  • ClydeBunnyhas quotedlast year
    It’s hard to know what we know sometimes, isn’t it?”
  • ClydeBunnyhas quotedlast year
    but on the other hand, isn’t that reality? Won’t most of us die in fairly unclimactic ways, our passing unremarked by almost everyone, our deaths becoming plot points in the narratives of the people around us?
  • ClydeBunnyhas quotedlast year
    Everything offended Jessica, which is inevitable when you move through the world in search of offense.
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