Sea of Tranquility Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Sea of Tranquility Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel
245,362 ratings, 4.08 average rating, 29,727 reviews
Open Preview
Sea of Tranquility Quotes Showing 1-30 of 193
“My point is, there’s always something. I think, as a species, we have a desire to believe that we’re living at the climax of the story. It’s a kind of narcissism. We want to believe that we’re uniquely important, that we’re living at the end of history, that now, after all these millennia of false alarms, now is finally the worst that it’s ever been, that finally we have reached the end of the world.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“A life lived in a simulation is still a life.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“Pandemics don’t approach like wars, with the distant thud of artillery growing louder every day and flashes of bombs on the horizon. The arrive in retrospect, essentially. It’s disorienting. The pandemic is far away and then it’s all around you with seemingly no intermediate step.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“There’s a low-level, specific pain in having to accept that putting up with you requires a certain generosity of spirit in your loved ones.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“This is the strange lesson of living in a pandemic: life can be tranquil in the face of death.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“If there’s pleasure in action, there’s peace in stillness.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“I’ve been thinking a great deal about time and motion lately, about being a still point in the ceaseless rush.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“It’s shocking to wake up in one world and find yourself in another by nightfall, but the situation isn’t actually all that unusual. You wake up married, then your spouse dies over the course of the day. You wake up in peacetime and by noon your country is at war; you wake up in ignorance and by the evening it’s clear that a pandemic is already here.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“If definitive proof emerges that we’re living in a simulation, the correct response to that news will be So what. A life lived in a simulation is still a life.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“No star burns forever.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“When have we ever believed that the world wasn’t ending?”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“Sometimes you don't know you're going to throw a grenade until you've already pulled the pin.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“The truth is,” Olive said, behind a lectern in Paris, “even now, all these centuries later, for all our technological advances, all our scientific knowledge of illness, we still don’t always know why one person gets sick and another doesn’t, or why one patient survives and another dies. Illness frightens us because it’s chaotic. There’s an awful randomness about it.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“It seems like it’s been fairly well contained,” but here’s an epidemiological question: if you’re talking about outbreaks of infectious disease, isn’t fairly well contained essentially the same thing as not contained at all?”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“Everything offended Jessica, which is inevitable when you move through the world in search of offense.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“Edwin is capable of action but prone to inertia.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“You write a book with a fictional tattoo and then the tattoo becomes real in the world and after that almost anything seems possible. She’d seen five of those tattoos, but that didn’t make it less extraordinary, seeing the way fiction can bleed into the world and leave a mark on someone’s skin.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“My personal belief is that we turn to postapocalyptic fiction not because we’re drawn to disaster, per se, but because we’re drawn to what we imagine might come next. We long secretly for a world with less technology in it.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“What you have to understand is that bureaucracy is an organism, and the prime goal of every organism is self-protection. Bureaucracy exists to protect itself.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“You should have told me my cat was a time traveler.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“The distance is unbearable if you let yourself dwell on it.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“Perhaps we believe on some level that if the world were to end and be remade, if some unthinkable catastrophe were to occur, then perhaps we might be remade too, perhaps into better, more heroic, more honorable people.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“You know the phrase I keep thinking about?" a poet asked, on a different panel, at a festival in Copenhagen. "The chickens are coming home to roost.' Because it's never good chickens. It's never 'You've been a good person and now your chickens are coming home to roost.' It's never good chickens. It's always bad chickens.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“We knew it was coming but we behaved inconsistently. We stocked up on supplies—just in case—but sent our children to school, because how do you get any work done with the kids at home?”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“A life of solitude could be a very pleasant thing.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“Well," he said, "I saw some things I wish I hadn't."

Understatement of the goddamned twentieth century.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“Because we might reasonably think of the end of the world,” Olive said, “as a continuous and never-ending process.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“—and my point is, there’s always something. I think, as a species, we have a desire to believe that we’re living at the climax of the story. It’s a kind of narcissism. We want to believe that we’re uniquely important, that we’re living at the end of history, that now, after all these millennia of false alarms, now is finally the worst that it’s ever been, that finally we have reached the end of the world.”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“Is this your first time staying with us?" a woman at a reception desk for the third or fourth hotel said to her, and Olive wasn't sure how to answer, because if you've stayed in one Marriott, haven't you stayed in all of them?”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility
“What if it always is the end of the world?”
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquility

« previous 1 3 4 5 6 7