The Nickel Boys Quotes

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The Nickel Boys The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead
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The Nickel Boys Quotes Showing 1-30 of 177
“We must believe in our souls that we are somebody, that we are significant, that we are worthful, and we must walk the streets of life every day with this sense of dignity and this sense of somebody-ness.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“You can change the law but you can’t change people and how they treat each other.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“If everyone looked the other way, then everybody was in on it. If he looked the other way, he was as implicated as the rest. That's how he saw it, how he'd always seen things.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“If it is true for you, it is true for someone else, and you are no longer alone.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“Make a career of humanity. Make it a central part of your life.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“The boys could have been many things had they not been ruined by that place. Doctors who cured diseases or perform brain surgery, inventing shit that saves lives. Run for president. All those lost geniuses - sure not all of them were geniuses, Chickie Pete for example was not solving special relativity - but they had been denied even the simple pleasure of being ordinary. Hobbled and handicapped before the race even began, never figuring out how to be normal.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“Like justice, it existed in theory.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“He who gets behind in a race must forever remain behind or run faster than the man in front.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“Violence is the only lever big enough to move the world”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“Perhaps his life might have veered elsewhere if the US government had opened the country to colored advancement like they opened the army. But it was one thing to allow someone to kill for you and another to let him live next door.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“The capacity to suffer. Elwood--all the Nickel boys--existed in the capacity. Breathed in it, ate in it, dreamed in it. That was their lives now. Otherwise they would have perished. The beatings, the rapes, the unrelenting winnowing of themselves. They endured. But to love those who would have destroyed them? To make that leap? We will meet your physical force with soul force. Do to us what you will and we will still love you.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“There are people who trick you and deliver emptiness with a smile, while others rob you of your self-respect. You need to remember who you are.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“It was easy to root for the winners. No, he liked the punch-drunk ones, half walking at mile twenty-three, tongues flapping like Labradors. Tumbling across the finish line by hook or by crook, feet pounded to bloody meat in their Nikes. The laggards and limpers who weren’t running the course but running deep into their character—down into the cave to return to the light with what they found. By the time they got to Columbus Circle, the TV crews have split, the cone cups of water and Gatorade litter the course like daisies in a pasture, and the silver space blankets twist in the wind. Maybe they had someone waiting for them and maybe they didn’t. Who wouldn’t celebrate that?”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“To forbid the thought of escape, even that slightest butterfly thought of escape, was to murder one's humanity.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“Throw us in jail, and we will still love you. Bomb our homes and threaten our children, and, as difficult as it is, we will still love you. Send your hooded perpetrators of violence into our communities after midnight hours, and drag us out onto some wayside road, and beat us and leave us half-dead, and we will still love you. But be ye assured that we will wear you down by our capacity to suffer, and one day we will win our freedom.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“The world continued to instruct: Do not love for they will disappear, do not trust for you will be betrayed, do not stand up for you will be swatted down. Still he heard those higher imperatives: Love and that love will be returned, trust in the righteous path and it will lead you to deliverance, fight and things will change. He never listened, never saw what was plainly in front of him, and now he had been plucked from the world altogether.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“In our modern age, cell phone technology permits us to record the constant brutality that occurs all around us; we experience not an uptick in violence but a new kind of witnessing.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“was like one of those Negroes Dr. King spoke of in his letter from jail, so complacent and sleepy after years of oppression that they had adjusted to it and learned to sleep in it as their only bed.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“because for him to do nothing was to undermine his own dignity.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“It didn't make no sense until it made the only sense.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“A jail within a jail. In those long hours, he struggled over Reverend King's equation. "Throw us in jail and we will love you ... But be assured that we will wear you down by our capacity to suffer, and one day we will win our freedom. We will not only win our freedom for ourselves, we will so appeal to your heart and your conscience that we will win you in the process and our victory will be a double victory." No he could not make that leap to love. He understood neither the impulse of the proposition nor the will to execute it.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“There are big forces that want to keep the Negro down, like Jim Crow, and there are small forces that want to keep you down, like other people, and in the face of all those things, the big ones and the smaller ones, you have to stand up straight and maintain your sense of who you are.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“You can change the law but you can’t change people and how they treat each other. Nickel was racist as hell—half the people who worked here probably dressed up like the Klan on weekends—but the way Turner saw it, wickedness went deeper than skin color. It was Spencer. It was Spencer and it was Griff and it was all the parents who let their children wind up here. It was people.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“To think of those Nickel nights where the only sounds were tears and insects, how you could sleep in a room crammed with sixty boys and still understand that you were the only person on earth. Everybody and nobody around at the same time. Here everybody was around and by some miracle you didn't want to wring their neck but give them a hug.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“He ate every miserable spoonful and ever since it struck him that adults are always trying to buy off children to make them forget their bad actions.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“Hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“How's that training coming along, Griff? Good old Max says you're a natural."

Turner frowned. Any time a white man asked you about yourself, they were about to fuck you over.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“Perhaps Nickel was the very afterlife that awaited him, with a White House down the hill and an eternity of oatmeal and an infinite brotherhood of broken boys.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“Hard work was a fundamental virtue, for hard work didn’t allow time for marches or sit-ins. Elwood would not make a commotion of himself by messing with that movie-theater nonsense, she said. “You have made an agreement with Mr. Marconi to work in his store after school. If your boss can’t depend on you, you won’t be able to keep a job.” Duty might protect him, as it had protected her.”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys
“It was not enough to survive, you have to live—”
Colson Whitehead, The Nickel Boys

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