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Quote by Suzy Davies

“Good writers always have a strong sense of who they are and who they are not. Like actors, their boundaries are strong, and fluid. They have a deep understanding of the human condition, and an empathy that is not so diffuse that it is diluted.”

Quote by Suzy Davies

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Suzy Davies

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“A legend of the desert tells the story of a man who wanted to move to another oasis, and began to load up his camel. He piled on his rugs, his cooking utensils, his trunks of clothes -and the animal accepted it all. As they were leaving, the man remembered a beautiful blue feather his father had given him. He retrieved it and placed it on the camel's back. With that, the animal collapsed of the weight and died. “My camel couldn't even bear the weight of a feather,” the man must have thought. Sometimes we think the same of others -without understanding that our little joke may have been the drop that caused the goblet of suffering to overflow.”

“I tablighi, come molti altri elementi non necessariamente fondamentalisti del mondo islamico, hanno una più generica e più esistenziale aspirazione: quella semplicemente di condurre un'esistenza diversa dalla nostra, di vivere secondo altri principi, di stare fuori dai meccanismi internazionali che loro vedono dominati da leggi e valori di stampo esclusivamente occidentale.. [...] A torto o a ragione, molti percepiscono la globalizzazione come uno strumento della nostra «civiltà atea e materialistica» che, appunto attraverso l'espansione dei mercati, diventa sempre più ricca e più forte a scapito del loro mondo. [...] Da qui la reazione difensiva e il ricorrere all'Islam come a un rifugio. La religione diventa l'arma ideologica contro [...] l'occidentalizzazione. [...] A noi può parere strano, ma 'è oggi nel mondo un crescente numero di persone che non aspira ad essere come noi, che non insegue i nostri sogni, che non ha le nostre aspettative e i nostri desideri.”

“It’s this thing I have. I’m sorry if it scared you. I feel other people’s feelings. I imagine crumbling insides and splitting hearts, goodbyes that hang in the air before they break into tiny pieces. I hear words that aren’t said, the echoes of lonely hallways and hollow footsteps. I hear sobs that soak pillowcases when all the lights are out and the world is sleeping. I carry this inside of me, all of it. I knew you paced the floor at night, trying to walk over all the things you didn’t want me to know. But I felt every wound you ever endured when I rested against you. I felt the ache that I have, deep inside of me, on your lips. Every time we kissed, I tasted a lifetime of tangled paths and bumpy roads woven with joined hands. Love isn’t blind, you see. I felt everything you were and could be, if only you stopped hiding in the same darkness you sheltered me from. I knew who you could become if someone loved you just right. I’m sorry if that scared you. Just in case you were wondering, I still love you and I'll keep the lights dim. Come home.”

“The results of five experiments involving more than a thousand participants showed that reading literary fiction improves our ability to detect and understand other people's emotions. But it can't be any sort of fiction. The researchers distinguished between "popular fiction" (where the author leads you by the hand as a reader) and "literary fiction" (in which you must find your own way and fill in the gaps). Instead of being told why a certain character behaves as they do, you have to figure it out yourself. That way, the book becomes not just a simulation of a social experience, it is a social experience.”