Date: December 30, 2015
"I had always considered my thoughts as something abstract, but they weren't; they were as material as the heart beating in my chest. The same was true of the mind, the soul, the personality; all of it was fixed in the cells and originated as a result of the various ways in which these cells reac...
preview | full record— Knausgaard, Karl Ove (b. 1968)
Date: December 30, 2015
"That is the wolf. The awkward, twisted or stupid part of the soul, the grudges and the envy, the hopelessness and the darkness, the childish joy and the unmanageable desire."
preview | full record— Knausgaard, Karl Ove (b. 1968)
Date: December 30, 2015
"The wolf is the part of human nature that the systems have no room for, the aspect of reality that our ideas, the firmament that the brain vaults above our lives, cannot fathom. The wolf is the truth."
preview | full record— Knausgaard, Karl Ove (b. 1968)
Date: 2015
"Look both ways before you cross my mind."
preview | full record— Kendrick Lamar [Kendrick Lamar Duckworth] (b. 1987)
Date: December 30, 2015
"Still harder was grasping that within that room, there was an opening into yet another room, the human brain."
preview | full record— Knausgaard, Karl Ove (b. 1968)
Date: 2015
"The memory branded itself on his brain: the gales of laughter, everyone offering him their cookies, the slave woman with her eyes on the floor."
preview | full record— Zink, Nell (b. 1964)
Date: 2015
"She knew Lee well, and by heading southeast, she had hidden in the folds of his own cerebral cortex."
preview | full record— Zink, Nell (b. 1964)
Date: 2015
"The mind of a child! Children have no hearts (cf. Peter Pan, another story Meg could reproduce fairly accurately), and their minds are rickety towers of surreal detritus."
preview | full record— Zink, Nell (b. 1964)
Date: 2015
"His thoughts on his back porch surrounded him like a carpet of mice, immobilizing him via his unwillingness to cause them pain. The mice of introspection were as effective as any buffalo herd."
preview | full record— Zink, Nell (b. 1964)
Date: 2015
"She regarded the token male Lee as a dull-witted, penile one-trick pony (to her, consistency was evidence of a mind standing erect), while women were polymath geniuses until proven otherwise."
preview | full record— Zink, Nell (b. 1964)