“A logical explanation, that was all the world needed to remain boring and safe.”
Source: 1618
“The greatest terror of experience isn't in the unknown, but in confronting the things we always knew but chose to ignore.”
“History doesn’t always provide tidy endings.”
Source: A Cold and Secret Death: A Cold War Mystery
“The truth seems to have many faces, and sometimes I’m not sure which one I’m dealing with.”
Source: A Cold and Secret Death: A Cold War Mystery
“Those who know don’t talk, and those who talk don’t know.”
Source: A Cold and Secret Death: A Cold War Mystery
“A wise man once said, there’s no problem that can’t be solved by a kind word,a five-figure payment or three inches of sharp metal.”
Source: Sharps
“It fits with what I think I know, but I admit I don't know about "all" reality. Maybe there is no "all" as the human mind would like to think about it. Maybe reality extends forever, forward and backward in a process of change in time. Maybe the universe has no boundaries.”
Source: The art of staying sane;
“Reality TV... The curse of the twenty-first century. Why were people so fascinated by being spectators to other people's lives? Watching people bake cakes, build tree houses, or just invading rich families' living rooms. It was like watching a soap opera without the plot.”
Source: Garage Band
“Man’s life is a cheat and a disappointment;
All things are unreal,
Unreal or disappointing:
The Catherine wheel, the pantomime cat,
The prizes given at the children’s party,
The prize awarded for the English Essay,
The scholar’s degree, the statesman’s decoration.
All things become less real, man passes
From unreality to unreality.
This man is obstinate, blind, intent
On self-destruction,
Passing from deception to deception,
From grandeur to grandeur to final illusion,
Lost in the wonder of his own greatness,
The enemy of society, enemy of himself.”
Source: Murder in the Cathedral
“You think we'll ever get used to the killing?" I ask Bobby Joe.
"I don't know," he answered. "I hope it's over before we do. I don't want to get used to it.”
Source: The Journal of Scott Pendleton Collins: A World War II Soldier, Normandy, France, 1944