"The thing all writers do best is find ways to avoid writing."
upworthy:
What Homophobes Are Afraid Of: Apart from being one of the funniest people in the world, Ellen DeGeneres is a champion for gay rights. She wonders why people are afraid of being influenced towards homosexuality when clearly homosexual people aren’t influenced into heterosexuality. Ya don’t make any damn sense, homophobes. Image courtesy of LGBT News.
(via wilwheaton)
shewhohangsoutincemeteries:
“Quickly! To the Angel-mobile! Away!”
(Source: whedonversegifs, via paperclippe)
"Picking five favorite books is like picking the five body parts you’d most like not to lose."
"I am more optimistic, both about reading and about books. There will always be non-readers, bad readers, lazy readers – there always were. Reading is a majority skill but a minority art. Yet nothing can replace the exact, complicated, subtle communion between absent author and entranced, present reader."
"By now, I probably preferred secondhand books to new ones. In America such items were disparagingly referred to as “previously owned”; but this very continuity of ownership was part of their charm. A book dispensed its explanation of the world to one person, then another, and so on down the generations; different hands held the same book and drew sometimes the same, sometimes a different wisdom from it."
"We love books for what they carry within them, not for what they’re made of."
"Children have always read books written for adults, even while their own body of literature has grown. Why even have a separate juvenile literature if children are exposed to the adult world daily? Because children can and do benefit from a literature that meets their interests and the context of their lives. What they do not benefit from is literature that is “dumbed down” on the assumption that they cannot handle complexities."