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The Sentence The Sentence by Louise Erdrich
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The Sentence Quotes Showing 1-30 of 219
“You can’t get over things you do to other people as easily as you get over things they do to you.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“When a baby falls asleep in your arms you are absolved. The purest creature alive has chosen you. There’s nothing else.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“The door is open. Go.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“I love statistics because they place what happens to a scrap of humanity, like me, on a worldwide scale.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“Small bookstores have the romance of doomed intimate spaces about to be erased by unfettered capitalism.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“Nothing makes Penstemon happier than handing a favorite book to someone who wants to read it. I’m the same. I suppose you could say this delights us although ‘delight’ is a word I rarely use. Delight seems insubstantial; happiness feels more grounded; ecstasy is what I shoot for; satisfaction is hardest to attain.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“A newborn baby has a powerful effect on character. But so does a toddler. A child. A preteen. A teenager. A mother changes with every stage. Some stages are within a mother's skill set. Some stages are like being told to scale a cliff using a rope attached to nothing.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“The world was filling with ghosts. We were a haunted country in a haunted world.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“I'd taken a pink eraser to my childhood and blurred the pain.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“Maybe this was what being in a pandemic brought forth. When everything big is out of control, you start taking charge of small things.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“She died instantly, said Kateri, implying she’d not had time to use a bookmark.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“I need a word, a sentence. The door is open. Go.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“There’s a word for your impulse, Louise. Cacoëthes, I said to her. The urge to do something somewhat wrong. Not something unspeakable or horrific. Just something you know is a bad idea.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“The world can go on without me. Here I shall be held by love.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“Sublime Books The Known World, by Edward P. Jones The Buried Giant, by Kazuo Ishiguro A Thousand Trails Home, by Seth Kantner House Made of Dawn, by N. Scott Momaday Faithful and Virtuous Night, by Louise Glück The Left Hand of Darkness, by Ursula K. Le Guin My Sentence Was a Thousand Years of Joy, by Robert Bly The World Without Us, by Alan Weisman Unfortunately, It Was Paradise, by Mahmoud Darwish Collected Fictions, by Jorge Luis Borges, trans. Andrew Hurley The Xenogenesis Trilogy, by Octavia E. Butler Map: Collected and Last Poems, by Wisława Szymborska In the Lateness of the World, by Carolyn Forché Angels, by Denis Johnson Postcolonial Love Poem, by Natalie Diaz Hope Against Hope, by Nadezhda Mandelstam Exhalation, by Ted Chaing Strange Empire, by Joseph Kinsey Howard Tookie’s Pandemic Reading Deep Survival, by Laurence Gonzales The Lost City of the Monkey God, by Douglas Preston The House of Broken Angels, by Luis Alberto Urrea The Heartsong of Charging Elk, by James Welch Selected Stories of Anton Chekhov, trans. Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating, by Elisabeth Tova Bailey Let’s Take the Long Way Home, by Gail Caldwell The Aubrey/Maturin Novels, by Patrick O’Brian The Ibis Trilogy, by Amitav Ghosh The Golden Wolf Saga, by Linnea Hartsuyker Children of Time, by Adrian Tchaikovsky Coyote Warrior, by Paul VanDevelder Incarceration Felon, by Reginald Dwayne Betts Against the Loveless World, by Susan Abulhawa Waiting for an Echo, by Christine Montross, M.D. The Mars Room, by Rachel Kushner The New Jim Crow, by Michelle Alexander This Is Where, by Louise K. Waakaa’igan I Will Never See the World Again, by Ahmet Altan Sorrow Mountain, by Ani Pachen and Adelaide Donnelley American Prison, by Shane Bauer Solitary, by Albert Woodfox Are Prisons Obsolete?, by Angela Y. Davis 1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows, by Ai Weiwei Books contain everything worth knowing except what ultimately matters. —Tookie * * * If you are interested in the books on these lists, please seek them out at your local independent bookstore. Miigwech! Acknowledgments”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“Books contain everything worth knowing except what ultimately matters.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“it’s grandma food, ‘bad for the arteries but good for the heart.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“Short Perfect Novels Too Loud a Solitude, by Bohumil Hrabel Train Dreams, by Denis Johnson Sula, by Toni Morrison The Shadow-Line, by Joseph Conrad The All of It, by Jeannette Haine Winter in the Blood, by James Welch Swimmer in the Secret Sea, by William Kotzwinkle The Blue Flower, by Penelope Fitzgerald First Love, by Ivan Turgenev Wide Sargasso Sea, by Jean Rhys Mrs. Dalloway, by Virginia Woolf Waiting for the Barbarians, by J. M. Coetzee Fire on the Mountain, by Anita Desai”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“Every world-destroying project disrupts something intimate, tangible, and Indigenous,”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“Ever since I understood this life was to be mine, I have wanted only for it to continue in its precious routine.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“What I’m trying to say is that a certain sentence of the book—a written sentence, a very powerful sentence—killed Flora.’ Louise was silent. After a few moments she spoke. ‘I wish I could write a sentence like that.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“I’m still not strictly rational. How could I be? I sell books.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“haunted by image after image. People kneeling, beaten. People singing, beaten. Mothers, beaten. Fathers, beaten. Young, beaten. Old, knocked down or beaten. If you approached the police, beaten. If you ran away, kettled, then beaten. Pollux had known good people, seen lives saved by his fellow patrol officers. So who was doing the beating? The uniforms or those inside them? How was it that protests against police violence showed how violent police really”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“Books for Banned Love Sea of Poppies, by Amitav Ghosh The English Patient, by Michael Ondaatje Euphoria, by Lily King The Red and the Black, by Stendahl Luster, by Raven Leilani Asymmetry, by Lisa Halliday All the Pretty Horses, by Cormac McCarthy Middlesex, by Jeffrey Eugenides The Vixen, by Francine Prose Legends of the Fall, by Jim Harrison The Winter Soldier, by Daniel Mason”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“Watching him closely after he paid for the books and took the package into his hands, I saw his pupils dilate the way a diner's do when food is brought to the table.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“You’re forgetting. A people who see themselves primarily as victims are doomed. And we’re not doomed, are we?”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“Pollux’s grandma had once told him dogs are so close with people that sometimes, when death shows up, the dog will step in and take the hit. Meaning, the dog would go off with death, taking their person’s place. I was pretty sure that Gary had done this for Roland and then visited the store to let me know.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“Asema. You're forgetting. A people who see themselves primarily as victims are doomed. And we're not doomed, are we?”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“Or maybe there was a god. Mine is the god of isolation, the god of the small voice, the god of the little spirit, of the earthworm and the friendly mouse, the hummingbird, the greenbottle fly and all things iridescent.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence
“I put my hand on my chest and closed my eyes. I have a dinosaur heart, cold, massive, indestructible, a thick meaty red. And I have a glass heart, tiny and pink, that can be shattered. The glass heart belongs to Pollux. There was a ping. To my surprise, it had developed a minute crack, nearly invisible. But it was there, and it hurt.”
Louise Erdrich, The Sentence

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