The Hole Quotes

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The Hole The Hole by Hye-Young Pyun
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The Hole Quotes Showing 1-18 of 18
“To be human was to be saddled with emptiness.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“To be human was to be saddled with emptiness.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“The world's oldest map, the Babylonian Map of the World, had a little circle bored through the center. [...] That dark, narrow hole went as deep as the memory of an age that no one could ever return to. The only way to reach that lost age was through that hole, but the hole itself could never be reached.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“The world’s oldest map, the Babylonian Map of the World, had a little circle bored through the center. Scholars explained that the hole had come from using a compass to trace the two outer rings of the map. Oghi was captivated more by that hole than by the geometric shapes engraved in the clay tablet, and had stared at it for a long time in the darkened exhibit room of the British Museum. That dark, narrow hole went as deep as the memory of an age that no one could ever return to. The only way to reach that lost age was through that hole, but the hole itself could never be reached.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“What he’d really returned to was this noisy, crowded, queuing, waiting, leering world. The world where, as his doctor explained, the only way to survive was through sheer force of will.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“The forties were a turning point, as it were, the decade of your life in which you either learned to fit in or dropped out completely.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“The forties were ripe for sin. And there were two basic reasons: either you had too much, or you didn’t have enough. In other words, the forties were when you found it easy to do bad things out of power, out of anger, or out of feeling left behind.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“It was difficult and exhausting, but he quickly accepted the fact that life had to go on without her. He’d lost love, and yet the world was not the slightest bit shaken by his loss. The part of his life that had had J in it went away, leaving behind a cavity, a hollow, and still the world was unmoved. Nothing would ever fill in that empty space. But Oghi’s world would keep on spinning regardless.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“but this came less from a love of humanity than from the fact that they didn’t have to worry about money.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“His father was convinced—afraid, in fact—that Oghi was constantly trying to fleece him of his money.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“He had a lingering impression of his own mother as someone who could stand up to his father and talk back to him even while in the grip of dark, pessimistic thoughts. She was at her most magnificent then.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“At the thought that his father’s intestinal walls were in danger of rupturing because he had a piece of shit stuck up his ass, Oghi couldn’t help breaking into random laughter in the middle of his lecture.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“Life itself was merely an accumulation of failures, and those failures never made life better.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“Therefore, the forties were the decade that showed you what your life had amounted to thus far. Not only that, they were also the decade in which you could guess at what lay ahead. Would you remain a snob? Or be left a loser?”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“As far as he could tell, that was his wife’s problem. Always wanting to be like someone else. And always giving up before she reached the end.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“Oghi slowly opened his eyes.

But because his time for crying has come.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“Sometimes one’s own success wasn’t enough. Sometimes the failure of someone closer to you was better insurance.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole
“It wasn’t until much later that he realized how much better it would’ve been if he’d let her find her own way out of this grief, slowly, without any empty promises or hasty conclusions.”
Hye-Young Pyun, The Hole