"Há três espécies de mulheres neste mundo: a mulher que se admira, a mulher que se deseja e a mulher que se ama. A beleza, o espírito, a graça, os dotes da alma e do corpo geram a admiração. Certas formas, certo ar voluptuoso, criam o desejo. O que produz o amor, não se sabe; é tudo isto às vezes; é mais do que isto, não é nada disto. Não sei o que é; mas sei que se pode admirar uma mulher sem a desejar, que se pode desejar sem a amar. O amor não está definido, nem o pode ser nunca. O amor verdadeiro..."
"There’s nothing wrong with reading a book you love over and over. When you do, the words get inside you, become a part of you, in a way that words in a book you’ve read only once can’t".
Gail Carson Levine, Writing Magic: Creating Stories that Fly
Sobre a felicidade e os três factores que a matam:
"There are three happiness killers - doing work you do not love and are not passionate about, surrounding yourself with people who you do not really like (someone who just fills time), and living somewhere that does not let you be you. Just stop it. Life is far too short".
Entrevista de Richard Florida para The Happiness Project: “Cycling, Writing, Walking — and Living in the Right City.”
E sobre a escrita:
"I never thought writing could bring so much pleasure. Yes, the old adage about all you have to do is sit down and the keyboard and "open vein" captures some of the initial pain and hesitation. But once you get into in, get into what the psychologist, Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi calls flow, it becomes quite enjoyable - that total focus, the sense of being inside your own ideas, and of course it's always much, much better when you see the finished product".
"The good artist believes that nobody is good enough to give him advice. He has supreme vanity. No matter how much he admires the old writer, he wants to beat him".
A menina que roubava livros (no original, The Book Thief) é do australiano Markus Zusak e foi publicado em 2006.
Adorei a entrevista do escritor:
"Liesel Meminger is only nine years old when she is taken to live with the Hubermanns, a foster family, on Himmel Street in Molching, Germany, in the late 1930s. She arrives with few possessions, but among them is The Grave Digger’s Handbook, a book that she stole from her brother’s burial place. During the years that Liesel lives with the Hubermanns, Hitler becomes more powerful, life on Himmel Street becomes more fearful, and Liesel becomes a full fledged book thief. She rescues books from Nazi book-burnings and steals from the library of the mayor. Liesel is illiterate when she steals her first book, but Hans Hubermann uses her prized books to teach her to read. This is a story of courage, friendship, love, survival, death, and grief. This is Liesel’s life on Himmel Street, told from Death’s point of view".
"Na minha casa desejo ter Uma mulher que imponha a sua razão Um gato passeando por entre os livros E porque sem eles não posso viver ...Amigos seja qual for a estação"
"I start very slowly, and don’t actually begin to write the book until I can’t stand not to write it. This method derives from my sense that one can start a book too soon, but almost never too late. I think it is also true that if you wait until you know enough to start, you never will. What I do instead of writing is to live with the book for a couple of months, often longer than that".