Home > Work > Everybody's Fool (Sully #2)
1 " We don’t forgive people because they deserve it,” she said. “We forgive them because we deserve it. "
― Richard Russo , Everybody's Fool (Sully #2)
2 " Rub wiped his nose on his sleeve. “I just wisht—” “What?” Rub sighed. Where to begin? “That I’d be nicer to you?” He shrugged again, but this was the gist of it, Sully could tell. “I wish I would, too,” he said, and for some reason this seemed to cheer Rub up. "
3 " I also think it’s possible for us to be better people tomorrow than we are today.” He had no idea, of course, whether any of these things were true, in whole or in part. Still, what possible good could come of believing otherwise? — "
4 " Amazing, isn’t it, when you think about it, how the world keeps on turning, no matter how fucked up things get?” In "
5 " witness the sad demise of fundamental Western values. Pride. Order. Personal responsibility. "
6 " «Y a Raymer, mientras la esperaba, le dio por pensar que esperar a una mujer que había olvidado algo era uno de los placeres más infravalorados de la vida.Cuántas veces, a punto de ir a cualquier lugar con Becka, ella había tenido que volver atrás porque se había dejado algo encima de la mesa de la cocina. Un hábito molesto, sí, pero qué maravilloso era cuando la veía reaparecer, qué dulce saber que no se había ido para siempre. Hasta el día en que sí se fue». "
7 " Since turning in his resignation, he’d been wondering what he might do next. Suddenly his path seemed clear. He would become an alcoholic. He "
8 " Yes. He loves us all. “No!” Tunic emphatically disagreed. “God does not.” Well, fuck him, then, Raymer thought, giddy with heat and blasphemy. Shame on God. “Because a shirker is a coward.” No, God is. "
9 " Because if you were God, it stood to reason your real enemy would be boredom. Sully "
10 " Maybe that was what marriage meant, except that in theirs it had been a one-way street. He couldn't think of a single behavior of Becka's that he had altered in the slightest. But perhaps that was because there was so little he'd wanted to change, whereas she'd evidently viewed him as a fixer-upper from the start, structurally sound, the sort of property you wouldn't mind owning after you'd completed all the necessary renovations. First, though, you'd have to gut it, which was pretty much how Raymer felt by the end. As if the overhaul of his person was coming in over budget, and the person footing the bills was having serious second thoughts. "
11 " Man starts thinking this late in life, no previous experience or proper guidance, "
12 " Still, what made people tick was no great mystery, was it? Greed. Lust. Anger. Jealousy. You could almost let your voice fall right there. Love? Some people claimed it made the world go round, but he wasn't so sure about that. Love mostly turned out to be one of those other emotions, or a mixture of them, in disguise. Even if it did exist, Raymer doubted its relevance to much of anything. "
13 " These days his own storytelling was undermined by his stammer, as well as by his conviction that a story had to be true. "
14 " He wasn’t just placing himself at risk; he was putting his self at risk, the same self that Thoreau thought was worth defending and protecting, the self whose primacy Emerson had argued for. (They’d read “Civil Disobedience” and “Self-Reliance” in her eighth-grade class.) The young, she claimed, were always being asked to risk who they really were, deep down, before they’d even had the opportunity to become acquainted. In her view it was wrong to ask them to gamble something they didn’t even know they possessed, much less what it might be worth. "