Ballard Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Ballard. Here they are! All 100 of them:

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I believe in the power of the imagination to remake the world, to release the truth within us, to hold back the night, to transcend death, to charm motorways, to ingratiate ourselves with birds, to enlist the confidences of madmen.
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J.G. Ballard
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Perhaps the future belongs to magic, and it's we women who control magic.
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J.G. Ballard (Rushing to Paradise)
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Civilised life, you know, is based on a huge number of illusions in which we all collaborate willingly. The trouble is we forget after a while that they are illusions and we are deeply shocked when reality is torn down around us.
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J.G. Ballard
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In a totally sane society, madness is the only freedom.
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J.G. Ballard (Running Wild)
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I wanted to rub the human race in its own vomit, and force it to look in the mirror.
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J.G. Ballard (Crash)
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Maybe you are a poet and a dreamer, but don't you realize that those two species are extinct now?
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J.G. Ballard
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After being bombarded endlessly by road-safety propaganda it was almost a relief to find myself in an actual accident.
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J.G. Ballard (Crash)
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Language exists less to record the actual than to liberate the imagination.
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Anthony Burgess
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Unhappy parents teach you a lesson that lasts a lifetime.
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J.G. Ballard
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I would sum up my fear about the future in one word: boring. And that's my one fear: that everything has happened; nothing exciting or new or interesting is ever going to happen again ... the future is just going to be a vast, conforming suburb of the soul
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J.G. Ballard
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Fiction is a branch of neurology: the scenarios of nerve and blood vessels are the written mythologies of memory and desire.
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J.G. Ballard
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The human race sleepwalked to oblivion, thinking only of the corporate logos on it's shroud.
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J.G. Ballard (Kingdom Come)
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Sooner or later, everything turns into television.
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J.G. Ballard
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Art exists because reality is neither real nor significant.
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J.G. Ballard
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Sooner or later, all games become serious.
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J.G. Ballard (Super-Cannes)
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I can't accept this, my lord. Its too fine a gift, and I am no queen." Ballard gently pushed it back to her. "You are, Louvaen. You're simply uncrowned.
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Grace Draven (Entreat Me)
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I'm a bad ass. A bad ass who bakes when he's depressed.
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Myra McEntire (Timepiece (Hourglass, #2))
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It may not always be easy, convenient or politically correct to stand for truth and right, but it is the right thing to do. Always.
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M. Russell Ballard
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Science is the ultimate pornography, analytic activity whose main aim is to isolate objects or events from their contexts in time and space. This obsession with the specific activity of quantified functions is what science shares with pornography.
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J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition)
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Deserts possess a particular magic, since they have exhausted their own futures, and are thus free of time. Anything erected there, a city, a pyramid, a motel, stands outside time. It's no coincidence that religious leaders emerge from the desert. Modern shopping malls have much the same function. A future Rimbaud, Van Gogh or Adolf Hitler will emerge from their timeless wastes.
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J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition)
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In the post-Warhol era a single gesture such as uncrossing one's legs will have more significance than all the pages in War and Peace.
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J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition)
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Surrender to a logic more powerful than reason.
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J.G. Ballard
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Let the psychotics take over. They alone understood what was happening.
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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They thrived on the rapid turnover of acquaintances, the lack of involvement with others, and the total self-sufficiency of lives which, needing nothing, were never dissapointed.
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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Put a higher value on yourself. Being hyper-realistic about everything is too simple a get-out.
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J.G. Ballard (Cocaine Nights)
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If their work is satisfying people don't need leisure in the old-fashioned sense. No one ever asks what Newton or Darwin did to relax, or how Bach spent his weekends. At Eden-Olympia work is the ultimate play, and play the ultimate work.
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J.G. Ballard (Super-Cannes)
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In a sense life in the high-rise had begun to resemble the world outside - there were the same ruthlessness and agression concealed within a set of polite conventions.
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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Au revoir, jewelled alligators and white hotels, hallucinatory forests, farewell.
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J.G. Ballard
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A kind of banalization of celebrity has occurred: we are now offered an instant, ready-to-mix fame as nutritious as packet soup.
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J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition)
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Everything is becoming science fiction. From the margins of an almost invisible literature has sprung the intact reality of the 20th century.
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J.G. Ballard
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The American Dream has run out of gas. The car has stopped. It no longer supplies the world with its images, its dreams, its fantasies. No more. It's over. It supplies the world with its nightmares now: the Kennedy assassination, Watergate, Vietnam...
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J.G. Ballard
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You are sweetness and light. Human cotton candy.
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Myra McEntire (Timepiece (Hourglass, #2))
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All over the world major museums have bowed to the influence of Disney and become theme parks in their own right. The past, whether Renaissance Italy or Ancient Egypt, is re-assimilated and homogenized into its most digestible form. Desperate for the new, but disappointed with anything but the familiar, we recolonize past and future. The same trend can be seen in personal relationships, in the way people are expected to package themselves, their emotions and sexuality, in attractive and instantly appealing forms.
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J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition)
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Science and technology multiply around us. To an increasing extent they dictate the languages in which we speak and think. Either we use those languages, or we remain mute.
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J.G. Ballard
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Sex is now a conceptual act, it's probably only in terms of the perversions that we can make contact with each other at all.
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J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition)
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It was an excess of fantasy that killed the old United States, the whole Mickey Mouse and Marilyn thing, the most brilliant technologies devoted to trivia like instant cameras and space spectaculars that should have stayed in the pages of Science Fiction . . . some of the last Presidents of the U.S.A. seemed to have been recruited straight from Disneyland.
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J.G. Ballard
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Deep assignments run through all our lives; there are no coincidences.
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J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition)
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The twentieth century ended with its dreams in ruins. The notion of the community as a voluntary association of enlightened citizens has died forever. We realize how suffocatingly humane we've become, dedicated to moderation and the middle way. The suburbanization of the soul has overrun our planet like the plague.
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J.G. Ballard (Super-Cannes)
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Yet she felt an impostor, and already the mask had begun to bite into her face.
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J.G. Ballard
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Elaborate burial customs are a sure sign of decadence.
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J.G. Ballard (The Complete Short Stories)
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this was an environment built, not for man, but for man's absence.
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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A narcissist never has your back.
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Zari L. Ballard (When Love Is a Lie - Narcissistic Partners & the Pathological Relationship Agenda)
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First she would try to kill him, but failing this give him food and her body, breast-feed him back to a state of childishness and even, perhaps, feel affection for him. Then, the moment he was asleep, cut his throat. The synopsis of the ideal marriage.
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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J. G. Ballard reminded us that β€˜the suburbs dream of violence. Asleep in their drowsy villas, sheltered by benevolent shopping malls, they wait patiently for the nightmares that will wake them into a more passionate world.
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George Monbiot (Feral: Searching for Enchantment on the Frontiers of Rewilding)
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To innovate does not necessarily mean to expand; very often it means to simplify.
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M. Russell Ballard
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I'm simply reminding you that you're worth more than what you'll find at the bottom of a bottle.
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Myra McEntire (Timepiece (Hourglass, #2))
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What matters most is what lasts the longest and families are forever.
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M. Russell Ballard
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A visit to Père Lachaise in Paris adds a year to one's life
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J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition)
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Remember, the police are neutral - they hate everybody.
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J.G. Ballard (Millennium People)
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I accepted that a new kind of hate had emerged, silent and disciplined, a racism tempered by loyalty cards and PIN numbers. Shopping was now the model for all human behaviour, drained of emotion and anger.
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J.G. Ballard (Kingdom Come)
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The marriage of reason and nightmare that dominated the 20th century has given birth to an ever more ambiguous world. Across the communications landscape move the spectres of sinister technologies and the dreams that money can buy. Thermo-nuclear weapons systems and soft-drink commercials coexist in an overlit realm ruled by advertising and pseudo-events, science and pornography. Over our lives preside the great twin leitmotifs of the 20th century – sex and paranoia…In a sense, pornography is the most political form of fiction, dealing with how we use and exploit each other, in the most urgent and ruthless way.
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J.G. Ballard
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These days even reality has to look artificial.
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J.G. Ballard (Kingdom Come)
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He walked into the bathroom, wincing at himself in the mirror, that always more tired older brother.
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J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition)
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Given that external reality is a fiction, the writer's role is almost superfluous. He does not need to invent the fiction because it is already there.
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J.G. Ballard
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The bourgeois novel is the greatest enemy of truth and honesty that was ever invented.
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J.G. Ballard (J.G. Ballard Conversations)
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The enormous energy of the twentieth century, enough to drive the planet into a new orbit around a happier star, was being expended to maintain this immense motionless pause.
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J.G. Ballard (Crash)
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In a sense, these people were the vanguard of a well-to-do and well-educated proletariat of the future, boxed up in these expensive apartments with their elegant furniture and intelligent sensibilities, and no possibility of escape.
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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The endless newsreel clips of nuclear explosions that we saw on TV in the 1960s (were) a powerful incitement to the psychotic imagination, sanctioning *everything*.
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J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition)
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...the arts and criminality have always flourished side by side.
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J.G. Ballard (Cocaine Nights)
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I'm not laughing, and I'm not running. I wont lie either. You're a chilling sight to behold. I've had nightmares of monsters prettier than you." She stepped closer and raised her other hand to thread her fingers through his hair. This time he didn't flinch away. "But you're still you under all this flux nonsense. Only a fool of a woman would run from such an extraordinary man, and I am no fool, Ballard de Sauveterre.
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Grace Draven (Entreat Me)
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The suburbs dream of violence. Asleep in their drowsy villas, sheltered by benevolent shopping malls, they wait patiently for the nightmares that will wake them into a more passionate world.
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J.G. Ballard (Kingdom Come)
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The 90’s map the decades to come – full of invisible technologies that will β€˜sub-contract’ many of the functions of the central nervous system.
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J.G. Ballard
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When Armageddon takes place, parking is going to be a major problem.
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J.G. Ballard (Millennium People)
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Our neighbours had happy childhoods to a man and still feel angry. Perhaps they resent never having had a chance to become perverse …
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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We live in a world ruled by fictions of every kindβ€”mass merchandising, advertising, politics conducted as a branch of advertising, the instant translation of science and technology into popular imagery, the increasing blurring and intermingling of identities within the realm of consumer goods, the preempting of any free or original imaginative response to experience by the television screen. We live inside an enormous novel. For the writer in particular it is less and less necessary for him to invent the fictional content of his novel. The fiction is already there. The writer's task is to invent the reality.
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J.G. Ballard (Crash)
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When you understand the Atonement, then you understand the joy of being rescued.
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M. Russell Ballard
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The ultimate concept car will move so fast, even at rest, as to be invisible.
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J.G. Ballard
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The advanced societies of the future will not be governed by reason. They will be driven by irrationality, by competing systems of psychopathology.
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J.G. Ballard (J.G. Ballard: Quotes: Does the Future Have a Future?)
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Togetherness is beating up an empty elevator.
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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One needs a great deal of idle time to feel really sorry for oneself.
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J.G. Ballard (Cocaine Nights)
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The only truly alien planet is Earth.
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J.G. Ballard
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We're building prisons all over the world and calling them luxury condos.
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J.G. Ballard (Cocaine Nights)
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He methodically basted the dark skin of the Alsatian, which he had stuffed with garlic and herbs. "One rule in life", he murmured to himself. "If you can smell garlic, everything is all right".
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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One looks forward to the day when the General Theory of Relativity and the Principia will outsell the Kama Sutra in back-street bookshops.
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J.G. Ballard
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Within half an hour almost all the women were drunk, a yardstick Laing had long used to measure the success of a party.
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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The house was silent, but somewhere in the garden was a swimming pool filled with unsettled water.
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J.G. Ballard (Super-Cannes)
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I suspect that many of the great cultural shifts that prepare the way for political change are largely aesthetic
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J.G. Ballard
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Each man is an island unto itself" - Strangman
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J.G. Ballard (The Drowned World)
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There is a British pop group called God. At a recent book signing the lead singer introduced himself and gave me a cassette. I have heard the voice of God.
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J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition)
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The world was beginning to flower into wounds.
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J.G. Ballard
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Not for the first time Laing reflected that he and his neighbors were eager for trouble as the most effective means of enlarging their sex lives.
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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Without knowing it, he had constructed a gigantic vertical zoo, its hundreds of cages stacked above each other. All the events of the past few months made sense if one realised that these brilliant and exotic creatures had learned to open the doors.
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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A mother's nurturing love arouses in children, from their earliest days on earth, an awakening of the memories of love and goodness they experience in their premortal existence, Because our mothers love us, we learn, or more accurately remember, that God also loves us
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M. Russell Ballard
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A car crash harnesses elements of eroticism, aggression, desire, speed, drama, kinesthetic factors, the stylizing of motion, consumer goods, status -- all these in one event. I myself see the car crash as a tremendous sexual event really: a liberation of human and machine libido (if there is such a thing).
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J.G. Ballard
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A new social type was being created by the apartment building, a cool, unemotional personality impervious to the psychological pressures of high-rise life, with minimal needs for privacy, who thrived like an advanced species of machine in the neutral atmosphere. This was the sort of resident who was content to do nothing but sit in his over-priced apartment, watch television with the sound turned down, and wait for his neighbours to make a mistake.
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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There are conversations going on about the Church constantly. Those conversations will continue whether or not we choose to participate in them. But we cannot stand on the sidelines while others, including our critics, attempt to define what our Church teaches... We are living in a world saturated with all kinds of voices. Perhaps now, more than ever, we have a major responsibility as Latter-day Saints to define ourselves, instead of letting others define us.
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M. Russell Ballard
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Remember, you can be exalted without a college degree. You can be exalted without being slender and beautiful. You can be exalted without having a successful career. You can be exalted if you are not rich and famous. So focus the best that you can on those things in life that will lead you back to the presence of God - keeping all things in their proper balance.
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M. Russell Ballard
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Trying to exhaust himself, Vaughan devised an endless almanac of terrifying wounds and insane collisions: The lungs of elderly men punctured by door-handles; the chests of young women impaled on steering-columns; the cheek of handsome youths torn on the chromium latches of quarter-lights. To Vaughan, these wounds formed the key to a new sexuality, born from a perverse technology. The images of these wounds hung in the gallery of his mind, like exhibits in the museum of a slaughterhouse.
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J.G. Ballard (Crash)
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Visiting his neighbours’ apartments, he would find himself physically repelled by the contours of an award-winning coffee-pot, by the well-modulated colour schemes, by the good taste and intelligence that, Midas-like, had transformed everything in these apartments into an ideal marriage of function and design.
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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I walked in without knocking. The screen door banged to a close behind me announcing my presence. I followed my nose to the kitchen and found Kaleb standing by the stove. He stirred something that smelled absolutely delicious a wooden spoon in one hand and a huge chef’s knife in the other. β€œAre you sober?” I asked from the doorway. He turned and leveled a smile at me that made me a little wobbly. β€œI am." β€œGood. Because if not I was going to take the deadly kitchen utensil away from you.” I crossed the room and pulled myself up to sit on the counter beside the stove. A cutting board full of green peppers and two uncut stalks of celery waited for attention from the knife. Melted butter and diced onions bubbled in a sautΓ© pan on the stove. β€œYou cook." Kaleb was so pretty I was jealous. Pretty with ripped muscles and a tattoo of a red dragon covering most of his upper body. β€œYes,” he said. β€œI cook.” β€œDo you usually wear a wife beater and,” I pushed him back a little by his shoulder β€œan apron that says β€˜Kiss the Cook’ while you’re doing it? ” He leaned so close to me my heart skipped a couple of beats. β€œI’ll wear it all the time if you’ll consider it.
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Myra McEntire (Hourglass (Hourglass, #1))
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The brief span of an individual life is misleading. Each one of us is as old as the entire biological kingdom, and our bloodstreams are tributaries of the great sea of its total memory. The uterine odyssey of the growing foetus recapitulates the entire evolutionary past, and its central nervous system is a coded time scale, each nexus of neurones and each spinal level marking a symbolic station, a unit of neuronic time.
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J.G. Ballard (The Drowned World)
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I guessed that he was one of those ambitious young physicians who more and more fill the profession, opportunists with a fashionable hoodlum image, openly hostile to their patients. My brief stay at the hospital had already convinced me that the medical profession was an open door to anyone nursing a grudge against the human race.
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J.G. Ballard (Crash)
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Tell the world what scares you the most” says Brandy. She gives us each an Aubergine Dreams eyebrow pencil and says β€œSave the world with some advice from the future” Seth writes on the back of a card and hands the card to Brandy for her to read. On game shows, Brandy reads, some people will take the trip to France, but most people will take the washer dryer pair.” Brandy puts a big Plumbago kiss in the little square for the stamp and lets the wind lift and card and sail it off toward the towers of downtown Seattle. Seth hands her another, and Brandy reads: Game shows are designed to make us feel better about the random useless facts that are all we have left from our education” A kiss and the card’s on it’s way toward Lake Washington. From Seth: When did the future switch from being a promise to being a threat?” A kiss and it’s off on the wind toward Ballard. Only when we eat up this planet will God give us another. We’ll be remembered more for what we destroy than what we create.” Interstate 5 snakes by in the distance. From high atop the Space Needle, the southbound lanes are red chase lights, and the northbound lanes are white chase lights. I take a card and write: I love Seth Thomas so much I have to destroy him. I overcompensate by worshipping the queen supreme. Seth will never love me. No one will ever love me ever again. Beandy is waiting to rake the card and read it out loud. Brandy’s waiting to read my worst fears to the world, but I don’t give her the card. I kiss it myself with the lips I don’t have and let the wind take it out of my hand. The card flies up, up, up to the stars and then falls down to land in the suicide net. While I watch my future trapped in the suicide net Brandy reads another card from Seth. We are all self-composting” I write another card from the future and Brandy reads it: When we don’t know who to hate, we hate ourselves” An updraft lifts up my worst fears from the suicide net and lifts them away. Seth writes and Brandy reads. You have to keep recycling yourself”. I write and Brandy reads. Nothing of me is original. I am the combined effort of everybody I’ve ever known.” I write and Brandy reads. The one you love and the one who loves you are never ever the same person.
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Chuck Palahniuk (Invisible Monsters)
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The media landscape of the present day is a map in search of a territory. A huge volume of sensational and often toxic imagery inundates our minds, much of it fictional in content. How do we make sense of this ceaseless flow of advertising and publicity, news and entertainment, where presidential campaigns and moon voyages are presented in terms indistinguishable from the launch of a new candy bar or deodorant? What actually happens on the level of our unconscious minds when, within minutes on the same TV screen, a prime minister is assassinated, an actress makes love, an injured child is carried from a car crash? Faced with these charged events, prepackaged emotions already in place, we can only stitch together a set of emergency scenarios, just as our sleeping minds extemporize a narrative from the unrelated memories that veer through the cortical night. In the waking dream that now constitutes everyday reality, images of a blood-spattered widow, the chromium trim of a limousine windshield, the stylised glamour of a motorcade, fuse together to provide a secondary narrative with very different meanings.
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J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition)
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As Miriam released my hand I felt that she and Midwife Bell had returned to a more primitive world, where men never intruded and even their role in conception was unknown. Here the chain of life was mother to daughter, daughter to mother. Fathers and sons belonged in the shadows with the dogs and livestock, like the retriever growling at Midwife Bell's unfamiliar car from the window of my neighbours' living room.
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J.G. Ballard (The Kindness of Women)
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The ambiguous role of the car crash needs no elaborationβ€”apart from our own deaths, the car crash is probably the most dramatic event in our lives, and in many cases the two will coincide. Aside from the fact that we generally own or are at the controls of the crashing vehicle, the car crash differs from other disasters in that it involves the most powerfully advertised commercial product of this century, an iconic entity that combines the elements of speed, power, dream and freedom within a highly stylized format that defuses any fears we may have of the inherent dangers of these violent and unstable machines.
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J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition)
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These people were content with their environment, and felt no particular objection to an impersonal steel and concrete landscape, no qualms about the invasion of their privacy by government agencies and organizations, and if anything welcoming these intrusions, using them for their own purposes. These people were the first to master a new kind of 20th century life. They thrived on the rapid turnover of acquaintances, the lack of involvement with others, and the total self-sufficiency of lives which, needing nothing, were never disappointed. Alternatively, their real needs might emerge later.
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)
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The crystal trees among them were hung with glass-like trellises of moss. The air was markedly cooler, as if everything was sheathed in ice, but a ceaseless play of light poured through the canopy overhead. The process of crystallization was more advanced. The fences along the road were so encrusted that they formed a continuous palisade, a white frost at least six inches thick on either side of the palings. The few houses between the trees glistened like wedding cakes, white roofs and chimneys transformed into exotic miniarets and baroque domes. On a law of green glass spurs, a child’s tricycle gleamed like a Faberge gem, the wheels starred into brilliant jasper crowns.
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J.G. Ballard (The Crystal World)
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Readers will recall that the little evidence collected seemed to point to the strange and confusing figure of an unidentified Air Force pilot whose body was washed ashore on a beach near Dieppe three months later. Other traces of his β€˜mortal remains’ were found in a number of unexpected places: in a footnote to a paper on some unusual aspects of schizophrenia published thirty years earlier in a since defunct psychiatric journal; in the pilot for an unpurchased TV thriller, β€˜Lieutenant 70’; and on the record labels of a pop singer known as The Him β€” to instance only a few. Whether in fact this man was a returning astronaut suffering from amnesia, the figment of an ill-organized advertising campaign, or, as some have suggested, the second coming of Christ, is anyone’s guess.
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J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition)
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Reluctantly, he knew that he despised his fellow residents for the way in which they fit so willingly into their appointed slots in the apartment buildings, for their overdeveloped sense of responsibility and lack of flamboyance. Above all, he looked down on them for their good taste. The building was a monument to good taste, to the well-designed kitchen, to sophisticated utencils and fabrics, to elegant and never ostentatious furnishings. In short, to that whole aesthetic sensibility which these well-educated, professional people had inherited from all the schools of industrial design, all the award-winning schemes of interior decoration institutionalized by the last quarter of the century. Royal detested this orthodoxy of the intelligent. Visiting his neighbors’ apartments, he would find himself physically repelled by the contours of an award-winning coffee pot, but the well-modulated color schemes, by the good taste and intelligence that, Midas-like, had transformed everything in these apartments into an ideal marriage of function and design. In a sense, these people were the vanguard of a well-to-do and well-educated proletariat of the future, boxed up in these expensive apartments with their elegant furniture, and intelligent sensibilities, and no possibility of escape.
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J.G. Ballard (High-Rise)