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Hilary Mantel

"The story of my own childhood is a complicated sentence that I am always trying to finish, to finish and put behind me. It resists finishing, and partly this is because words are not enough; my early world was synaesthesic, and I am haunted by the ghosts of my own sense impressions, which re-emerge when I try to write, and shiver between the lines."

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"The story of my own childhood is a complicated sentence that I am always trying to finish, to finish and put behind me. It resists finishing, and partly this is because words are not enough; my early world was synaesthesic, and I am haunted by the ghosts of my own sense impressions, which re-emerge when I try to write, and shiver between the lines."

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Donna Grant

"Every time the long-forgotten people of the past are remembered, they are born again!"

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Snow floated down every once in a while, but it was frail snow, like a memory fading into the distance."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"If knew more about Alzheimer's and the Brain, your mind will be blow and most cases you will confused..."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"To forget is to blithely toss aside the hard lessons that were hard won by others before us, thereby needlessly dooming us to endure the hard lessons that are likely to be forgotten by those who will follow us. And it is altogether reasonable that in order to avoid this repetitive trouncing, God graciously granted us memories."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Take it from me: If you hear the past speaking to you, feel it tugging up your back and runing its fingers up your spine, the best thing to do-the only thing-is run."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"I remember your profile in darkness outlined by stars ..."

Author Name

Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"The most evocative life memories, which produced a synesthesia of emotions, consist of a host of small pleasures intertwined with the homespun stitches of love, affection, kindness, humility, and appreciation of nature."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Create memories, forget misery."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Precipitate as weather, she appeared from somewhere, then evaporated, leaving only memory."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"I shouldn't have taken a vow of silence, I told myself. What did I want? Nothing much. Just a memorial. But what is a memorial, when you come right down to it, but a commemoration of wounds endured? Endured, and resented. Without memory, there can be no revenge."

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Personal Development

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Hilary Mantel
"There's a feeling of power in reserve, a power that drives right through the bone, like the shiver you sense in the shaft of an axe when you take it into your hand. You can strike, or you can not strike, and if you choose to hold back the blow, you can still feel inside you the resonance of the omitted thing."

Power

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Hilary Mantel
"You can be merry with the king, you can share a joke with him. But as Thomas More used to say, it's like sporting with a tamed lion. You tousle its mane and pull its ears, but all the time you're thinking, those claws, those claws, those claws."

Humor

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Hilary Mantel
"Feminism hasn't failed, it's just never been tried."

Feminism

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Hilary Mantel
"He saw that it was the gaps that were important, the spaces between the threads which made the pattern, and not the threads themselves."

Observation

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Hilary Mantel
"Do you look like the photograph on your book jackets? Authors, I find, seldom do."

Perception

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Hilary Mantel
"Fiction leaves us so much work to do, allows the individual so much input; you have to see, you have to hear, you have to taste the madeleine, and while you are seemingly passive in your chair, you have to travel."

Fiction

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Hilary Mantel
"Florence and Milan had given him ideas more flexible than those of people who'd stayed at home."

Perspective

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Hilary Mantel
"Some readers read a book as if it were an instruction manual, expecting to understand everything first time, but of course when you write, you put into every sentence an overflow of meaning, and you create in every sentence as many resonances and double meanings and ambiguities as you can possibly pack in there, so that people can read it again and get something new each time."

Reading

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Hilary Mantel
"The way I tell it, he says to Fitzwilliam, you would think that the blow on the head had improved him. That he actually set out to get it. That every monarch needs a blow on the head, from time to time."

Humor

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Hilary Mantel
"No man as godly as George, the only fault he finds with God is that he made folk with too few orifices. If George could meet a woman with a quinny under her armpit, he would call out 'Glory be' and set her up in a house and visit her every day, until the novelty wore off. Nothing is forbidden to George, you see. He'd go to it with a terrier bitch if she wagged her tail at him and said bow-wow.'For once he is struck silent. He knows he will never get it out of his mind, the picture of George in a hairy grapple with a little ratting dog."

Humor

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