17 Quotes & Sayings By Mt Anderson

M.T. Anderson is the author of numerous award-winning novels, including Feed, The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, Eragon, and the bestselling Young Adult series, Axis. His work has received wide critical acclaim, including the National Book Award for Young Adult Literature for The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing. He lives in Colorado with his family.

We all flee in hope of finding some ground of...
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We all flee in hope of finding some ground of security M.T. Anderson
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Hope, belief, and despair are not simply moods. They change our physical performance. They alter how quickly we react, how hard we fight, how quick we are to give up.- Symphony for the City of the Dead: Dmitri Shostakovich and the Siege of Leningrad M.T. Anderson
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There are times when friendship feels like running down a hill together as fast as you can, jumping over things, spinning around, and you don't care where you're going, and you don't care where you've come from, because all that matters is speed, and the hands holding your hands. M.T. Anderson
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I run through the woods, at once applauding myself for my wit-"" Well deserved, sir. Well deserved."" And at the self instant, I am grinding my teeth because I am a vain, revenging idiot and shall be run down because of it. M.T. Anderson
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It meant different things to different people, but somehow it meant them all intensely. Shostakovich's words just confuse the issue. His symphony itself is what remains. Listen to it. It is your symphony to write with him. M.T. Anderson
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I shall speak of love...and of hate. It is truly a marvel, but I tell you, hatred and love may live cramped together, crouching in the same heart. M.T. Anderson
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There are some who believe that the mind is a blank tablet, on which experience is writ until the page be full, and the cryptic world is known; but I see rather that my own life hath been one long forgetting, the erasure of what was drawn, a terrible redaction; til all that remains is blank white and comfortless. I know not what we have been; I know not what we are; but I know what we might be. And so I light out for the unknown regions. M.T. Anderson
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It was a strange moment, like when you get sad after sex, and it feels like it's too late in the afternoon, even if it's morning, or night, and you turn away from the other person, and they turn away from you, and you lie there, and when you turn back towards them you can both see each other's moles. Usually there seem to shadows from Venetian blinds all across your legs. M.T. Anderson
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Some love is so powerful after all, that it must always include sadness, because encrypted within it is the knowledge that someday it will come to an end. M.T. Anderson
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I'm electric with vertigo, even though I'm on the ground, vertigo like I felt once when I stood on the edge of a high cliff in Arizona and looked straight down. M.T. Anderson
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When asked, 'What did you want to say in this work?' he would answer, 'I've said what I've said.' This made sense in where everyone assumed music had a meaning - but where saying the wrong thing could get a person killed.- Symphony for the City of the Dead: Dmitri Shostakovich and the Siege of Leningrad M.T. Anderson
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People talk about the beauty of the spring, but I can't see it. The trees are brown and bare, slimy with rain. Some are crawling with new purple hairs. And the buds are bulging like tumorous acne, and I can tell that something wet, and soft, and cold, and misshapen is about to be born. And I am turning into a vampire. M.T. Anderson
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I can read. A little. I kind of protested it in School(TM). On the grounds that the silent 'E' is stupid. M.T. Anderson
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When we read tales of atrocity, we all want to be the one who stood firm, who would not bend, who shouted the truth in the face of the dictator. Vsevolod Meyerhold came as close as anyone to achieving this. It is important to know of the full horror of his sacrifice. It is easy for all to imagine we are heroes when we are sitting in our kitchens, dreaming of distant suffering.- Symphony for the City of the Dead: Dmitri Shostakovich and the Siege of Leningrad. M.T. Anderson
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The Leningrad Public Library remained open throughout the siege and became a place for people to congregate. People came to the library to read, even when weak from cold and exhaustion . Some died in their places, with a book propped in front of them . . In the course of the war, the librarians greatly expanded the collection, purchasing books from the starving, who were desperate to sell anything for food. Some of the city's librarians scoured bombed ruins for volumes, scrabbling over the piles of brick with their backpacks full of salvaged books. . M.T. Anderson
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We Americans are interested only in the consumption of our products. We have no interest in how they are produced, or what happens to them once we discard them, once we throw them away. M.T. Anderson