Pynchon Entropy Quotes & Sayings
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Top Pynchon Entropy Quotes

There comes a time in the spiritual journey when you start making choices from a very different place. And if a choice lines up so that it supports truth, health, happiness, wisdom and love, it's the right choice. — Angeles Arrien

My son has one parent who's 50. I want him to have a family of young people, too! — Sophie B. Hawkins

What was wrong with communism wasn't aberrant leadership, it was communism. — William F. Buckley Jr.

I went to the top of the Cotton Bowl by myself, sat down and cried. — Lesley Visser

the feeling of a steering wheel under one's hand, the ability to pick up a receiver and call someone miles away, knowing that a train could carry you to see a friend in a fraction of the time horse travel would have taken, all of this somehow made the world seem smaller. When people saw the world as a smaller place would they finally realize that each person, each creature they shared it with was indeed a neighbor and that hatred without just cause was indeed destructive? — Keair Snyder

you base your faith on experience, your faith is — Ram Dass

For years, I felt I was a novelist, but now I know I can write short fiction. — Jill McCorkle

Amelia's second trip to Bangor was called Woman's Day, an event arranged by the chamber of commerce in cooperation with Boston-Maine Airways. Planes of the air service flew nearly empty out of Bangor, a fact lamented by Godfrey himself. A commonly held perception was that the wives of businessmen perceived flying as dangerous and thus discouraged their husbands from using aircraft for business trips. This belief hindered the growth of air passenger service. Amelia hoped to dispel that notion. — David H. Bergquist

Logic said it was impossible but logic wasn't doing too well here lately, was it? — Gregory Benford

We must see the face of the Lord ... There are things that God says to me that I know must take place. It doesn't matter what people say. I have been face to face with some of the most trying moments of men's lives when it meant so much to me if I kept the vision, and if I held fast to that which God had said. A man must be in an immovable condition. The voice of God must mean to him more than what he sees, feels, or what people say. — Smith Wigglesworth