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John Connolly Quotes

Quotes tagged as "john-connolly" Showing 1-7 of 7
John Connolly
“‎"Sarge, mr. Nurd here is threatening to turn me to jelly."
"really?" said Sarge. "what flavor?”
John Connolly, The Gates

John Connolly
“Each of us has only one life to live, and one life to give. There is no glory in throwing it away where there is no hope.”
John Connolly, The Book of Lost Things

John Connolly
“There are some truths so terrible that they should not be spoken aloud, so appaling that even to acknowledge them is to risk sacrificing a crucial part of one's humanity, to exist in a colder, crueler world than before.
The Burning Soul”
John Connolly

John Connolly
“Life was simpler, too, if one did not think too hard.
-The Burning Soul”
John Connolly

John Connolly
“It was my first glimpse of the honeycomb world, my first inkling that the past never truly dies but is strangely, beautifully alive in the present. There is an interconnectedness to all things, a link between what lies buried and what lives above, a capacity for mutability that allows a good act committed in the present to rectify an imbalance in times gone by. That, in the end, is the nature of justice: not to undo the past but, by acting further down the line of time, to restore some measure of harmony, some possibility of equilibrium, so that lives may continue with their burden eased and the dead may find peace in a world beyond this one.”
John Connolly, The Killing Kind

John Connolly
“I can’t go with you,’ he told her. ‘Whatever you have to face down there, you must face it alone.’
‘I understand.’
And she did. It didn’t mean she wasn’t scared, but she was stronger now, altered forever by this journey. The Ceres who had first arrived would not have been capable of walking through that doorway - or more correctly, would not have believed herself capable of it, which was not the same thing. That Ceres was lost, and melancholic, but had forgotten for a while that this was the human condition: often to be lost, confused or anxious, but finally to comprehend that, at crucial instances, we will find ourselves lost precisely where we were meant to be; that there is little of use to be learned from the familiar - only from what is strange and new; and that everything worth experiencing or embracing is, because unknown, first touched by fear.”
John Connolly, The Land of Lost Things

John Connolly
“Twice upon a time - for that is how some stories should continue - there was a mother whose daughter was stolen from her.”
John Connolly, The Book of Lost Things