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Diana Gabaldon

"Still less could I be afraid of those ghosts who touch my thoughts in passing. Any library is filled with them. I can take a book from dusty shelves, and be haunted by the thoughts of one long dead, still lively as ever in their winding sheet of words."

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"Still less could I be afraid of those ghosts who touch my thoughts in passing. Any library is filled with them. I can take a book from dusty shelves, and be haunted by the thoughts of one long dead, still lively as ever in their winding sheet of words."

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"You become that which you constantly think about."

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"A ruffled mind makes a restless pillow."

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"You affect your subconscious mind by verbal repetition."

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"The President has a quick and able mind, though not everybody gives him that, not by a long shot."

Explore more quotes by Diana Gabaldon

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Diana Gabaldon
"When I turned 35, I thought, 'Mozart was dead at 36, so I set the bar: I'm going to start writing a book on my next birthday.' I thought historical fiction would be easiest because I was a university professor and know my way around a library, and it seemed easier to look things up than make them up."
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Diana Gabaldon
"I put back my head, looking up at the deep black sky swimming with hot stars. If you knew they were really balls of flaming gas, you could imagine them as Van Gogh saw them, without difficulty . . . and looking into that illuminated void, you understood why people have always looked up into the sky when talking to God. You need to feel the immensity of something very much bigger than yourself, and there it is - immeasurably vast, and always near at hand. Covering you."
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Diana Gabaldon
"As a rule of thumb, four consecutive lines of dialogue is about as much as you want to have without a tag."
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Diana Gabaldon
"Mid-afternoon, I'll go out and do the household errands, come home, do my gardening, go for an evening walk."
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Diana Gabaldon
"No matter how ugly the manner in which a man dies, it's only the presence of a suffering human soul that is horrifying, once gone, what is left is only an object."
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Diana Gabaldon
"For months, people have been asking my views about the Scottish independence referendum, and I've been saying, 'It's not my country; I don't live here. Much as I love Scotland, I think it would be inappropriate to express a personal opinion regarding Scottish politics'."
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Diana Gabaldon
"God, don't laugh!" Jamie said, alarmed. "I didna mean to make ye laugh! Christ, Jenny will kill me if ye cough up a lung and die out here!"
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Diana Gabaldon
"The law's a necessary evil--we canna be doing without it--but do ye not think it a poor substitute for conscience?"
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Diana Gabaldon
"Nay, he needs a woman, not a girl. And Laoghaire will be a girl when she's fifty."
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Diana Gabaldon
"For a different woman, a different relationship, a different situation, gentleness might have been the proper, the only approach-but not for this woman, in these circumstances. The only thing that will cleanse Claire (and reassure her: look at what she says at the end of it. She feels safe again, having felt the power and violence in him) is violence. And-the most important point here-Jamie pays attention to what she wants, rather than proceeding with his own notion of how it should be, even though it's a sensible notion and the one most people would have."
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