37 Quotes & Sayings By Paolo Bacigalupi

Paolo Bacigalupi is the author of The Windup Girl, The Water Knife, and The City of Mirrors. He lives in Portland, Oregon.

1
The more I write stories for young people, and the more young readers I meet, the more I'm struck by how much kids long to see themselves in stories. To see their identities and perspectives–their avatars–on the page. Not as issues to be addressed or as icons for social commentary, but simply as people who get to do cool things in amazing worlds. Yes, all the “issue” books are great and have a place in literature, but it's a different and wildly joyous gift to find yourself on the pages of an entertainment, experiencing the thrills and chills of a world more adventurous than our own. And when you see that as a writer, you quickly realize that you don't want to be the jerk who says to a young reader, “Sorry, kid. You don't get to exist in story; you're too different.” You don't want to be part of our present dystopia that tells kids that if they just stopped being who they are they could have a story written about them, too. That's the role of the bad guy in the dystopian stories, right? Given a choice, I'd rather be the storyteller who says every kid can have a chance to star. . Paolo Bacigalupi
The problem with surviving was that you ended up with...
2
The problem with surviving was that you ended up with the ghosts of everyone you’d ever left behind riding on your shoulders. Paolo Bacigalupi
You couldn’t live close to war and not have it...
3
You couldn’t live close to war and not have it grab you eventually. Paolo Bacigalupi
Hell, we’re all bullet bait sooner or later. Doubt it...
4
Hell, we’re all bullet bait sooner or later. Doubt it makes much difference. You make it to sixteen, you’re a goddamn legend. Paolo Bacigalupi
Her face was smeared with mud and blood and ash....
5
Her face was smeared with mud and blood and ash. Just another bit of debris in the wreckage of war. Paolo Bacigalupi
Maggot twitch, some people called it. If you’d seen much...
6
Maggot twitch, some people called it. If you’d seen much of the war, you had it. Some more. Some less. But everybody had it. Paolo Bacigalupi
7
Mahlia… understood Doctor Mahfouz and his blind rush into the village. He wasn’t trying to change them. He wasn’t trying to save anyone. He was just trying to not be part of the sickness. Mahlia had thought he was stupid for walking straight into death, but now, as she lay against the pillar, she saw it differently. She thought she’d been surviving. She thought that she’d been fighting for herself. But all she’d done was create more killing, and in the end it had all led to this moment, where they bargained with a demon … not for their lives, but for their souls” (p. 403) . Paolo Bacigalupi
8
We are nature. Our every tinkering is nature, our every biological striving. We are what we are, and the world is ours. We are its gods. Your only difficulty is your unwillingness to unleash your potential fully upon it. Paolo Bacigalupi
9
Pain held no terror for him. Pain was, if not friend, then family, something he had grown up with in his crèche, learning to respect but never yield to. Pain was simply a message, telling him which limbs he could still use to slaughter his enemies, how far he could still run, and what his chances were in the next battle. Paolo Bacigalupi
10
I'm a chess piece. A pawn, ' she said. 'I can be sacrificed, but I cannot be captured. To be captured would be the end of the game. Paolo Bacigalupi
11
But then, that was the problem with pretty toy stitches. When real life got hold of them, they always tore out. Paolo Bacigalupi
12
Believing is for Santa Claus, right? It's for Tooth Fairies. It's for your boyfriend when he says he's never met anyone like you and wants to feel you up. That's believing. It's for little kids. Belief. You believe in God? Paolo Bacigalupi
13
Belief.” He snorted. “I could kiss a thousand crosses. Fucking belief. Paolo Bacigalupi
14
Family. It was just a word… Could see its letters all strung together. But it was a symbol, too. And people thought they knew what it meant… It was a thing everyone had an opinion about–that it was all you had when you didn’t have anything else, that family was there, that blood was thicker than water, whatever. But when Nailer thought about it, most of these words and ideas just seemed like good excuses for people to behave badly and get away with it. Family wasn’t more reliable than marriages or friendships…maybe less… The blood bond was nothing. It was the people that mattered. If they covered your back, and you covered theirs, then maybe that was worth calling family. Paolo Bacigalupi
15
Jesus walked on water, so maybe he makes aquifers, too. Paolo Bacigalupi
16
Some things, it was better not to think about. It just made you mad and angry. Paolo Bacigalupi
17
Suicide is not something I owe you or yours. Paolo Bacigalupi
18
A gamble. Everything was a damn gamble. Betting against luck and the Fates, again and again, and again. She kept walking, waiting for the bullet. Paolo Bacigalupi
19
Laws are confusing documents. They get in the way if justice. Paolo Bacigalupi
20
Laws are confusing documents. They get in the way of justice. Paolo Bacigalupi
21
At root, I think that any given technology (think nuclear power, gunpowder, the written word...) has the potential to improve our lives, wound it, and also to create unexpected accidents. It's not the technology that's the problem, it's us, the users. However angelic or demonic, or thoughtful or thoughtless we happen to be is then amplified by our technologies. Paolo Bacigalupi
22
The Drowned Cities hadn’t always been broken. People broke it. First they called people traitors and said they didn’t belong. Said these people were good and those people were evil, and it kept going, because people always responded, and pretty soon the place was a roaring hell because no one took responsibility for what they did, and how it would drive others to respond. Paolo Bacigalupi
23
Tool wondered if the girl was going mad. It happened to people. Sometimes they saw too much and their minds went away. They lost the will to survive. They curled up and surrendered to madness. Paolo Bacigalupi
24
No one else could see all the bodies she’d left behind, but they were there, looking at her. Or maybe that was just her, looking at herself, and not liking what she saw. Knowing she could never escape her own judging gaze. Paolo Bacigalupi
25
The thought burrowed into her heart as darkness fell. It coiled in her guts as she wedged herself amongst the boughs of a tree to sleep. And in the morning, it woke with her and clung to her back, riding on her shoulders as she climbed down, hungry and exhausted from nightmares. Paolo Bacigalupi
26
Never beg for mercy. Accept that you have failed. Begging is for dogs and humans. Paolo Bacigalupi
27
Thanks to the centrifugal pump, places like Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas had thrown on the garments of fertility for a century, pretending to greenery and growth as they mined glacial water from ten-thousand-year-old aquifers. They'd played dress-up-in-green and pretended it could last forever. They'd pumped up the Ice Age and spread it across the land, and for a while they'd turned their dry lands lush. Cotton, wheat, corn, soybeans -- vast green acreages, all because someone could get a pump going. Those places had dreamed of being different from what they were. They'd had aspirations. And then the water ran out, and they fell back, realizing too late that their prosperity was borrowed, and there would be no more coming. . Paolo Bacigalupi
28
Start by loving, instead of needing. Paolo Bacigalupi
29
They’d blame a castoff just for breathing. You could be good as gold and they’d still blame you. Paolo Bacigalupi
30
Crew up, Nailer! " Lucky Girl shouted. "You think I'm going to pull your ass up here like a damn swank? Paolo Bacigalupi
31
Everything’s bad, until you find something worse. Paolo Bacigalupi
32
It’s still a load. If there was balance, the soldier boys would all be dead, and we’d be sitting pretty in the middle of the Drowned Cities, shipping marble and steel and copper and getting paid Red Chinese for every kilo. We’d be rich and they’d be dead, if there was such a thing as the Scavenge God, or his scales. And that goes double for the Deepwater priests. They’re all full of it. Nothing balances out. Paolo Bacigalupi
33
I was interested in political failure here in the U.S. The way we're failing to work together to solve even our smallest problems, let alone the complex ones. Paolo Bacigalupi
34
Science fiction has these obsessions with certain sciences - large scale engineering, neuroscience. Paolo Bacigalupi
35
I'm not proud of it, but I'm a great liar when I travel. I smile and lie, and things are smooth. Paolo Bacigalupi
36
I'm particularly interested in black swan events: unprecedented surprises that destroy the conventional wisdom about how the world works. Paolo Bacigalupi