11 Quotes & Sayings By Alan Brennert

Alan Brennert is the author of the bestselling, award-winning novels The Last Innocent Man, The Devil Said Bang, and The Burning Season. A former foreign correspondent for Time magazine, he has also contributed articles to the New York Times Magazine, the New Yorker, and Harper's. He was a senior editor at Simon & Schuster for ten years before becoming an independent writer. He is a regular contributor to National Public Radio's nationally syndicated program Car Talk.

She already felt dead in everything but name. What remained...
1
She already felt dead in everything but name. What remained to be taken from her? She longed to be enfolded, welcomed, into the earth - to breathe no more, love no more, hurt no more Alan Brennert
2
Love, marriage, divorce, infidelity... life was the same here as anywhere else, wasn't? She realized now wrong she'd been; the pali wasn't a headstone and Kalaupapa wasn't a grave. It was a community like any other, bound by ties deeper than most, and people here went to their deaths as people did anywhere: with great reluctance, dragging the messy jumble of their lives behind them. Alan Brennert
3
What's it like? Being married? Cold feet. Middle of the night you're sleeping, suddenly, wham, you've got ice cold feet warming themselves on the back of your legs. Alan Brennert
4
We make a home for ourselves, every time we work on something: actors, writers, singers, building these little nests in our gypsy souls, in place of the ones we so seldom seem to make in our own lives. And then suddenly it's over, and we have to start again. Alan Brennert
5
Surrounded by darkness yet enfolded in light Alan Brennert
6
Isn't it strange, how one so afraid of contracting a fatal malady...should so earnestly wish for death, as well? Alan Brennert
7
Old Korean adage, "Even jade has flaws." Or, in other words: Nothing in life is ever perfect. Alan Brennert
8
An aching vacuum inside her sucking the air from her lungs. She hung her head and wept fiercely, the emptiness inside her growing larger not smaller; she felt as though it would grow so large it would suffocate her just as surely as the sea would have Alan Brennert
9
Summer in Honolulu brings the sweet smell of mangoes, guava, and passionfruit, ripe for picking; it arbors the streets with the fiery red umbrellas of poincianta trees and decorates the sidewalks with the pink and white puffs of blossoming monkeypods. Cooling trade winds prevail all summer, bringing what the old Hawaiians called makani 'olu' 'olu--- "fair wind". Alan Brennert
10
*And to keep her immune system strong she followed Dr. Goodhue's advice to abstain from alcohol, get plenty of fresh air and exercise, and consume a nourishing diet, low in salt. Page 144"Fear is good. In the right degree it prevents us from making fools of ourselves. But in the wrong measure it prevents us from fully living. Fear is our boon companion but never our master.". Page 204"I've come to believe that how we choose to live with pain, or injustice, or death .. Is the true measure of the Divine within us." . "I used to wonder, why did God give children leprosy? Now I believe: God doesn't give anyone leprosy. He gives us, if we choose to use it, the spirit to live with leprosy, and with the imminence of death. Because it is in our own mortality that we are most Divine.". Page 307**"With wonder and a growing absence of fear she realized, I am more than I was an hour ago.". Page 372**my favorite! . Alan Brennert