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Quote by Jennifer E. Smith

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Field Notes on Love

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Author

Jennifer E. Smith
Jennifer E. Smith

Jennifer E. Smith is a highly acclaimed American author best known for her captivating young adult (YA) fiction. While specific details regarding her exact date of birth remain limited in available public records, her significant impact on contemporary literature is undeniable. Before embarking on her successful writing career, Smith worked as an editor, which deeply influenced her narrative precision. She is celebrated for her ability to weave heartwarming romances with philosophical reflections on fate, chance, and human connection. Her most notable works include The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight, This Is What Happy Looks Like, and Windfall. These novels have resonated with a global audience, translated into over thirty languages, and frequently optioned for film adaptations. Residing in New York City, Smith continues to be a defining voice in modern YA literature, enchanting readers with her witty, tender, and emotionally resonant storytelling. more

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“There’s an overlapping echo of waves dancing in my brain, and I can hear amidst it also the skittering exodus of a thousand crustaceans over the shifting sands of Riptide. Are they exploring? Scavenging? Migrating possibly. I cannot see them in this darkness, yet hold in mind briefly the image of their silhouettes against the shimmering sea reflecting the crimson evening sky, and through this immersion it becomes difficult to know what is real...”

“If, on the other hand, you insist on your knowledge of the emperor's nakedness, you may not find the ready assent from others which could confidently be expected only if you assume their good faith toward their own experience; In fact, their strenuous denial that they share your experience may leave you in such isolation that ultimately not only they but you yourself begin to question your sanity.”

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“Science is thus not the creation of some kind of mysterious contact with or insight into ultimate reality, but the upshot of our own very human, and even culturally local, interests, concerns, and values. I suspect, also, that we are ready to give particular weight and credence to the 'evidence of our senses' because it is not in our interests to deceive ourselves about its nature (although it is certainly possible to do so).”