Showing posts with label inspiring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspiring. Show all posts

Monday, 9 July 2012

Metropolis finale

"The mediator between the head and the hand must be the heart."
--- Fritz Lang, Metropolis


Wednesday, 4 July 2012

Bookish quotation 3 for deckchair competition

Roddy Doyle:
"I knew all the books in the house. I knew their shapes and smells. I knew what pages would open if I held them with the spine on the ground and let the sides drop."
-- Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha, p.75 (and what a beautiful argument against e-books!) (by the way, apropos of the Julian Barnes thread, this was one of the first hardback books I got, it was a bargain-priced £1.99 and it still has that sticker on the jacket to prove it! Hard-back, with dust jacket still intact, alas, it was only a reprint edition in 1993, so not a first edition, oh well (it probably wouldn't have been just 1.99 even in early 90s bargain prices!). Anyway, this is one of my favourite books ever and I like having it physically with me, and now, opening the book again to locate the quote after all these years, I'm a little sad to see the pages slightly yellowing around the edges already, even though it still looks pristine outside. But then I got reading one of my favourite passages again, that quietly heart-breaking part about how Paddy was trying so hard to mediate between his da and his ma by remembering his spellings and syllables, which had so much resonance for me when I first read it and still finds the passage resonating again after all these years... thanks for the chance to revisit a lost country.)

Tuesday, 3 July 2012

Bookish quotation 2 for deckchair competition

Zadie Smith:
"But you'll like it."
"Why, because she's black?"
"No - becuase it's really good wriitng."
-- from "Changing My Mind" p. 3
"The truth is, black women writers, while writing many wonderful things, have been no more or less successful at avoiding falsification of human experience than any other group of writers."
-- from "Changing My Mind" p. 9 (I feel that the above second quote would make a great companion deckchair to Yiyun Li's quote I cited above -- that is, provided that both of these quotes are selected rather than disqualified from the competition due to word length as well as the fact that they aren't exactly paens to literature but about the difficulty of relating truth in fiction.) And, as I too don't have a Kindle (not that I would even if I could), I shall stop here and come back another time with other selections that may be more to the spirit of the exercise.