Karen Thompson Walker
But the past is long, and the future is short.
— Karen Thompson Walker
Feeling earthquakes was part of growing up, and also preparing for them: doing earthquake drills, or having earthquake supplies. The looming feeling was part of my life. My experience of earthquakes has always been more the fear of them, or the possibility.
— Karen Thompson Walker
He'd grown eager to hand off his things, as if the weight of his possessions kept him tethered to this earth, and by giving them away, he could snip those strings.
— Karen Thompson Walker
I can write all the way through the morning, when my mind is clear, and there are no distractions.
— Karen Thompson Walker
I could no longer remember the way my mother's eyes looked before the slowing. Had they always been so red around the edges? Surely, those pockets of gray beneath her lower lashes were new. She still wasn't sleeping well, but perhaps what I was seeing was just age, a gradual shift that I'd failed to register. I sometimes felt the urge to study recent photographs of her in order to locate the exact point in time when she had come to look so weary.
— Karen Thompson Walker
I'd grown up hearing stories about the special hazards that girls faced. I knew where the bodies were found: naked on beaches or cut into pieces, parts frozen in freezers or buried in cement. These stories were never kept from us girls. Instead, they were spread around like ghost stories, our parents hoping that fear would do the job that our judgment might not.
— Karen Thompson Walker
I like to edit my sentences as I write them. I rearrange a sentence many times before moving on to the next one. For me, that editing process feels like a form of play, like a puzzle that needs solving, and it's one of the most satisfying parts of writing.
— Karen Thompson Walker
It requires a certain kind of bravery, I suppose, to choose the status quo. There's a certain boldness to inaction.
— Karen Thompson Walker
Our fears are an amazing gift of the imagination... a way of glimpsing what might be the future when there's still time to influence how that future will play out.
— Karen Thompson Walker
The only thing you have to do in this life is die," said Mrs. Minsky..."everything else is a choice.
— Karen Thompson Walker
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