en

Andrew Greer

  • Aaby Sanzhar citeratför 2 år sedan
    Like someone who has just learned a foreign language and can use only the present tense and only the second person. Only now, only you.
  • Aaby Sanzhar citeratför 2 år sedan
    phrase he does not want to say and yet, somehow, by the cruel checkmate logic of conversation, is compelled to say:

    “Thank you.”
  • Aaby Sanzhar citeratför 2 år sedan
    I feel like I just understood how to be young.”

    “Yes! It’s like the last day in a foreign country. You finally figure out where to get coffee, and drinks, and a good steak. And then you have to leave. And you won’t ever be back.”
  • raniahar citeratförra månaden
    By his forties, all he has managed to grow is a gentle sense of himself, akin to the transparent carapace of a soft-shelled crab.
  • raniahar citeratförra månaden
    How can so many things become a bore by middle age—philosophy, radicalism, and other fast foods—but heartbreak keeps its sting? Perhaps because he finds fresh sources for it.
  • raniahar citeratförra månaden
    Life was not hard; you shouldered it bravely, knowing all the time that if you sent the signal, help would arrive.
  • raniahar citeratför 22 dagar sedan
    Life so often arrives all of a sudden. And who knows which side you will find yourself on?
  • raniahar citeratför 20 dagar sedan
    Nobody is kidding. They are dead serious.
  • raniahar citeratför 20 dagar sedan
    And Less feels it swelling up within him, the phrase he does not want to say and yet, somehow, by the cruel checkmate logic of conversation, is compelled to say:

    “Thank you.”
  • raniahar citeratför 20 dagar sedan
    Less stands below it, experiencing that Wonderland sensation of having been shrunk, by Finley Dwyer, into a tiny version of himself; he could pass through the smallest door now, but into what garden? The Garden of Bad Gays.
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