Doctorow Quotes

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

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Writing is a socially acceptable form of schizophrenia.
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E.L. Doctorow
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[Writing is] like driving a car at night: you never see further than your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.
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E.L. Doctorow
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E.L. Doctorow said once said that 'Writing a novel is like driving a car at night. You can see only as far as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.' You don't have to see where you're going, you don't have to see your destination or everything you will pass along the way. You just have to see two or three feet ahead of you. This is right up there with the best advice on writing, or life, I have ever heard.
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Anne Lamott (Bird by Bird)
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Writing is like driving at night in the fog. You can only see as far as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.
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E.L. Doctorow (Writers At Work: The Paris Review Interviews, 2nd Series)
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Never underestimate the determination of a kid who is time-rich and cash-poor.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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When in trouble or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout.
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Cory Doctorow
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Good writing is supposed to evoke sensation in the readerβ€”not the fact that it is raining, but the feeling of being rained upon.
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E.L. Doctorow
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There is music in words, and it can be heard you know, by thinking.
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E.L. Doctorow (Homer & Langley)
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I am often asked the question How can the masses permit themselves to be exploited by the few. The answer is By being persuaded to identify with them.
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E.L. Doctorow (Ragtime)
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Writing is an exploration. You start from nothing.
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E.L. Doctorow
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If you stare at someone long enough, they'll eventually look back at you.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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Funny, for all surveillance, Osama bin Laden is still freeΒ—and we're not. Guess who's winning the "war on terror?
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Cory Doctorow
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I am telling you what I knowβ€”words have music and if you are a musician you will write to hear them.
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E.L. Doctorow
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Planning to write is not writing. Outlining, researching, talking to people about what you're doing, none of that is writing. Writing is writing.
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E.L. Doctorow
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All secrets become deep. All secrets become dark. That's in the nature of secrets.
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Cory Doctorow (Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town)
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The difference between Socrates and Jesus is that no one had ever been put to death in Socrates' name. And that is because Socrates' ideas were never made law. Law, in whatever name, protects privilege.
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E.L. Doctorow
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We are the people of the book. We love our books. We fill our houses with books. We treasure books we inherit from our parents, and we cherish the idea of passing those books on to our children. Indeed, how many of us started reading with a beloved book that belonged to one of our parents? We force worthy books on our friends, and we insist that they read them. We even feel a weird kinship for the people we see on buses or airplanes reading our books, the books that we claim. If anyone tries to take away our booksβ€”some oppressive government, some censor gone off the railsβ€”we would defend them with everything that we have. We know our tribespeople when we visit their homes because every wall is lined with books. There are teetering piles of books beside the bed and on the floor; there are masses of swollen paperbacks in the bathroom. Our books are us. They are our outboard memory banks and they contain the moral, intellectual, and imaginative influences that make us the people we are today.
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Cory Doctorow
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It was evident to him that the world composed and recomposed itself constantly in an endless process of dissatisfaction.
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E.L. Doctorow (Ragtime)
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I can't go underground for a year, ten years, my whole life, waiting for freedom to be handed to me. Freedom is something you have to take for yourself.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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Writers are not just people who sit down and write. They hazard themselves. Every time you compose a book your composition of yourself is at stake.
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E.L. Doctorow
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He hated it when adults told him he only felt the way he did because he was young. As if being young was like being insane or drunk, like the convictions he held were hallucinations caused by a mental illness that could only be cured by waiting five years.
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Cory Doctorow (For the Win)
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It's the stupid questions that have some of the most surprising and interesting answers. Most people never think to ask the stupid questions.
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Cory Doctorow (For the Win)
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Like most gunters, I voted to reelect Cory Doctorow and Wil Wheaton (again). There were no term limits, and those two geezers had been doing a kick-ass job of protecting user rights for over a decade.
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Ernest Cline (Ready Player One (Ready Player One, #1))
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Conversation is king. Content is just something to talk about.
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Cory Doctorow
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A novelist is a person who lives in other people's skins.
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E.L. Doctorow
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Skipping school isn't a crime. It's an infraction. They're totally different.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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Satire's nature is to be one-sided, contemptuous of ambiguity, and so unfairly selective as to find in the purity of ridicule an inarguable moral truth.
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E.L. Doctorow
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Universal access to human knowledge is in our grasp, for the first time in the history of the world. This is not a bad thing.
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Cory Doctorow
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We are all good friends. Friendship is what endures. Shared ideals, respect for the whole character of a human being.
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E.L. Doctorow (Ragtime)
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If you want to double your success rate, triple your failure rate.
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Cory Doctorow (Pirate Cinema)
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Someone dying asks if there is life after death. Yes, comes the answer, only not yours.
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E.L. Doctorow
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It's our goddamed city! It's our goddamed country. No terrorist can take it from us for so long as we're free. Once we're not free, the terrorists win! Take it back! You're young enough and stupid enough not to know that you can't possibly win, so you're the only ones who can lead us to victory! Take it back!
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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He had them as spellbound as a room full of Ewoks listening to C-3PO.
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Cory Doctorow (Makers)
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Stories distribute the suffering so that it can be borne.
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E.L. Doctorow
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The future's a weirder place than we thought it would be when we were little kids.
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Cory Doctorow (For the Win)
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Abnormal is so common, it's practically normal.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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Writing is like driving a car at night. You can only see as far as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.
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E.L. Doctorow (Ragtime)
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Stories are propaganda, virii that slide past your critical immune system and insert themselves directly into your emotions.
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Cory Doctorow (Eastern Standard Tribe)
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The first casualty of any battle is the plan of attack.
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Cory Doctorow (For the Win)
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The writer isn't made in a vacuum. Writers are witnesses. The reason we need writers is because we need witnesses to this terrifying century.
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E.L. Doctorow
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Because like all whores you value propriety. You are creature of capitalism, the ethics of which are so totally corrupt and hypocritical that your beauty is no more than the beauty of gold, which is to say false and cold and useless.
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E.L. Doctorow (Ragtime)
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The three most important documents a free society gives are a birth certificate, a passport, and a library card.
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E.L. Doctorow
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And though the newspapers called the shooting the Crime of the Century, Goldman knew it was only 1906 and there were ninety-four years to go.
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E.L. Doctorow (Ragtime)
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Most of the people you see going to work today are LARPing (live-action role playing) an incredibly boring RPG (role-playing game) called "professionalism" that requires them to alter their vocabulary, posture, eating habits, facial expressions--every detail all the way down to what they allow themselves to find funny.
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Cory Doctorow (In Real Life)
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Novels for me are how I find out what's going on in my own head. And so that's a really useful and indeed critical thing to do when you do as many of these other things as I do.
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Cory Doctorow
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Take it from someone who's read the Wikipedia entry: this is how the Ottoman Empire was won: madden horsemen fueled by lethal jet-black coffee-mud.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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I asked this question: How can I think about my brain when it’s my brain doing the thinking? So is this brain pretending to be me thinking about it?
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E.L. Doctorow (Andrew's Brain)
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Once you get to naming your laptop, you know that you're really having a deep relationship with it.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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Ω‡Ψ± Ψ΄Ω‡Ψ±ΫŒ Ψ³Ψ±Ψ§Ω†Ψ¬Ψ§Ω… Ψ¨Ω‡ ΩΎΨ§ΫŒΨ§Ω† Ω…ΫŒβ€ŒΨ±Ψ³Ψ― و Ψ¬Ψ§Ψ―Ω‡β€ŒΨ§ΫŒ ΨͺΩ‡ΫŒ Ψ’ΨΊΨ§Ψ² Ω…ΫŒβ€ŒΨ΄ΩˆΨ― Ϊ©Ω‡ ΩΎΫŒΩ…ΩˆΨ―Ω† Ψ’Ω† Ψ§ΫŒΩ…Ψ§Ω† Ω…ΫŒβ€ŒΨ·Ω„Ψ¨Ψ―
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E.L. Doctorow (Billy Bathgate)
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... the Kindle is a "roach motel" device: its license terms and DRM ensure that books can check in, but they can't check out.
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Cory Doctorow (Context: Further Selected Essays on Productivity, Creativity, Parenting, and Politics in the 21st Century)
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You're nothing more than a clever prostitute. You accepted the conditions in which you found yourself and you triumphed.
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E.L. Doctorow (Ragtime)
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The fact is, almost everything you do is collaborative. Somewhere out there, someone else had a hand it it.
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Cory Doctorow (For the Win)
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The difference between reading a story and studying a story is the difference between living the story and killing the story and looking at its guts.
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Cory Doctorow (Eastern Standard Tribe)
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The opposite of esprit d'escalier is the way that life's embarrassments come back to haunt us even after they're long past. I could remember every stupid thing I'd ever said or done, recall them with picture-perfect clarity. Any time I was feeling low, I'd naturally start to remember other times I felt that way, a hit parade of humiliations coming one after another to my mind.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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...if justice cannot be made to operate under the worst possible conditions of social hysteria, what does it matter how it operates at other times?
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E.L. Doctorow
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I remember holding her in my arms and absolving God of meaninglessness.
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E.L. Doctorow (Homer & Langley)
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This life is real too. We're communicating aren't we?
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Cory Doctorow (In Real Life)
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The good news (for writers) is that this means that ebooks on computers are more likely to be an enticement to buy the printed book (which is, after all, cheap, easily had, and easy to use) than a substitute for it. You can probably read just enough of the book off the screen to realize you want to be reading it on paper.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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I don't know anything about press conferences." "Oh, just Google it. I'm sure someone's written an article on holding a successful one. I mean, if the President can manage it, I'm sure you can. He looks like he can barely tie his shoes without help.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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We don’t care about what you did yesterdayβ€”we care about what you’re going to do tomorrow.
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Cory Doctorow (Makers)
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I hate that," I said. "It's like there's no human beings in the chain of responsibility, just things-that-happen. It's the ultimate cop-out. The system did it. The company did it. The government did it. What about the person who pulls the trigger?
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Cory Doctorow (Homeland (Little Brother, #2))
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Your problem is, you're trying to understand it. You need to just do it.
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Cory Doctorow (Pirate Cinema)
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We're going to fight this battle with everything we have, and we will probably lose. But then we will fight it again, and we will lose a little less, for this battle will win us many supporters. And then we'll lose *again*. And *again*. And we will fight on. Because as hard as it is to win by fighting, it's impossible to win by doing nothing.
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Cory Doctorow (For the Win)
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I'm 17 years old. I'm not a straight-A student or anything. Even so, I figured out how to make an Internet that they can't wiretap. I figured out how to jam their person-tracking technology. I can turn innocent people into suspects and turn guilty people into innocents in their eyes. I could get metal onto an airplane or beat a no-fly list. I figured this stuff out by looking at the web and by thinking about it. If I can do it, terrorists can do it. They told us they took away our freedom to make us safe. Do you feel safe?
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Cory Doctorow
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And why? Is our genius only in our wombs? Can we not write books and create learned scholarship and perform music and provide philosophical models for the betterment of mankind?
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E.L. Doctorow (Ragtime)
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And so the ordinary unendurable torments we all experienced were indeed exceptional in the way they were absorbed in each heart.
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E.L. Doctorow (City of God)
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We roared. We were one big animal throat, roaring.
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Cory Doctorow
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I'd never been a tall guy, and the girls I'd dated had all been my height--teenaged girls grow faster than guys, which is a cruel trick of nature.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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The historian will tell you what happened. The novelist will tell you what it felt like.
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E.L. Doctorow
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I want to just DO SOMETHING instead of ask someone else to start a process to investigate the possibility of someday possibly maybe doing something.
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Cory Doctorow (Makers)
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For me -- for pretty much every writer -- the big problem isn't piracy, it's obscurity.
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Cory Doctorow
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Start at the beginning,” he said. β€œMove one step in the direction of your goal. Remember that you can change direction to maneuver around obstacles. You don’t need a plan, you need a vector.
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Cory Doctorow (Homeland (Little Brother, #2))
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I can assure you Ernest Hemingway was wrong when he said modern American literature began with Huckleberry Finn. It begins with Moby-Dick, the book that swallowed European civilization whole.
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E.L. Doctorow
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– I understand the world can be cruel place and there are people out there counting on naive kids like you to take advantage of. Don't just think because it's video games people can't get hurt.
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Cory Doctorow (In Real Life)
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What's the point of a houseful of books you've already read?
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Cory Doctorow (Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town)
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Where most people live, most of us, imagining it to be the real sunlit world when it is only a cave lit by the flickering fires of illusion.
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E.L. Doctorow (Andrew's Brain)
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if it's not in my email archive, I don't know it
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Cory Doctorow
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The companies are multinational--why should labor still stick to borders?
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Cory Doctorow (For the Win)
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my problem isn’t piracy, it’s obscurity
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Cory Doctorow (Makers)
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When in problem, or in doubt, run in cirles, scream and shout
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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Governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, that whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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It was like finding Attila the Hun at a yoga class. Like finding Darth Vader playing ultimate Frisbee in the park. Like finding Megatron volunteering at a children's hospital. Like finding Nightmare Moon having a birthday party at Chuck E. Cheese.
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Cory Doctorow (Homeland (Little Brother, #2))
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If you've never programmed a computer, you should. There's nothing like it in the whole world. When you program a computer, it does exactly what you tell it to do. It's like designing a machine β€” any machine, like a car, like a faucet, like a gas-hinge for a door β€” using math and instructions. It's awesome in the truest sense: it can fill you with awe.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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You know, there comes a point where you're not giving advice anymore. There comes a point where you're just moralizing, demonstrating your hypothetical superiority when it comes to doing the right thing. That's not very fucking helpful, you know. I'm holding my shit together right now, and rather than telling me that it's not enough, you could try to help me with the stuff I'm capable of.
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Cory Doctorow (Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town)
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Everyone wants a definition of creativity that makes what they do into something special and what everyone else does into nothing special. But the fact is, we're all creative. We come up with weird and interesting ideas all the time. The biggest difference between 'creators' isn't their imagination - it's how hard they work. Ideas are easy. Doing stuff is hard.
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Cory Doctorow (Pirate Cinema)
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I fireballed him as he was seeking out treasure after we wiped out a band of orcs, playing rock-paper-scissors with each orc to determine who would prevail in combat. This is a lot more exciting than it sounds. It's quite civilized, and a little weird. You go running after someone through the woods, catch up with him, bare your teeth, and sit down to play a little roshambo.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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There's something really liberating about having some corner of your life that's yours, that no one gets to see except you. It's a little like nudity or taking a dump. Everyone gets naked every once in a while. Everyone has to squat on the toilet. There's nothing shameful, deviant or weird about either of them.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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Right, and you point out something important which is that people who don’t want to pay, people who are pirates, don’t get bothered by the DRM, they go out and buy the cracked books or download the cracked books for free. It’s only people who are foolish enough to pay for them that get locked into these platforms.
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Cory Doctorow
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I knew he was unreliable, but he was fun to be with. He was a child’s ideal companion, full of surprises and happy animal energy. He enjoyed food and drink. He liked to try new things. He brought home coconuts, papayas, mangoes, and urged them on our reluctant conservative selves. On Sundays he liked to discover new places, take us on endless bus or trolley rides to some new park or beach he knew about. He always counseled daring, in whatever situation, the courage to test the unknown, an instruction that was thematically in opposition to my mother’s.
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E.L. Doctorow (World's Fair)
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The Bill of Rights was written before data-mining," he said. He was awesomely serene, convinced of his rightness. "The right to freedom of association is fine, but why shouldn't the cops be allowed to mine your social network to figure out if you're hanging out with gangbangers and terrorists?
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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The United States of America was a pirate nation for the first one hundred years of its existence, ripping off the patents and trademarks of the imperial European powers it had liberated itself from by blood. By keeping their GDP at home, the U.S. revolutionaries were able to bootstrap their nation into an industrial powerhouse. Now, it seems, their descendants are bent on ensuring that no other country can pull the same trick off.
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Cory Doctorow (Overclocked: Stories of the Future Present)
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For hundreds of years, the human race has dreamt of a world where knowledge could be shared universally, where every human being on the planet could have access to our storehouse of knowledge. Because knowledge is power, and shared knowledge is a superpower. Now, after centuries, we have it within our grasp to realize one of our most beautiful dreams.
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Cory Doctorow (Pirate Cinema)
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I watched bulls bred to cows, watched mares foal, I saw life come from the egg and the multiplicative wonders of mudholes and ponds, the jell and slime of life shimmering in gravid expectation. Everywhere I looked, life sprang from something not life, insects unfolded from sacs on the surface of still waters and were instantly on prowl for their dinner, everything that came into being knew at once what to do and did it, unastonished that it was what it was, unimpressed by where it was, the great earth heaving up bloodied newborns from every pore, every cell, bearing the variousness of itself from every conceivable substance which it contained in itself, sprouting life that flew or waved in the wind or blew from the mountains or stuck to the damp black underside of rocks, or swam or suckled or bellowed or silently separated in two.
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E.L. Doctorow (Lives of the Poets: A Novella and Six Stories)
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I used to want to understand how the world worked. Little things, like heavy stuff goes at the bottom of the laundry bag, or big things, like the best way to get a boy to chase you is to ignore him, or medium things, like if you cut an onion under running water your eyes won't sting, and if you wash your fingers afterwards with lemon-juice they won't stink. I used to want to know all the secrets, and every time I learned one, I felt like I'd taken--a step. On a journey. To a place. A destination: to be the kind of person who knew all this stuff, the way everyone around me seemed to know all this stuff. I thought that once I knew enough secrets, I'd be like them.
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Cory Doctorow (Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town)
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If you love freedom, if you think the human condition is dignified by privacy, by the right to be left alone, by the right to explore your weird ideas provided you don’t hurt others, then you have common cause with the kids whose web-browsers and cell phones are being used to lock them up and follow them around. If you believe that the answer to bad speech is more speech - not censorship - then you have a dog in the fight. If you believe in a society of laws, a land where our rulers have to tell us the rules, and have to follow them too, then you’re part of the same struggle that kids fight when they argue for the right to live under the same Bill of Rights that adults have.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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That’s why you never hear politicians talking about β€˜citizens,’ it’s all β€˜taxpayers,’ as though the salient fact of your relationship to the state is how much you pay. Like the state was a business and citizenship was a loyalty program that rewarded you for your custom with roads and health care. Zottas cooked the process so they get all the money and own the political process, pay as much or as little tax as they want. Sure, they pay most of the tax, because they’ve built a set of rules that gives them most of the money. Talking about β€˜taxpayers’ means that the state’s debt is to rich dudes, and anything it gives to kids or old people or sick people or disabled people is charity we should be grateful for, since none of those people are paying tax that justifies their rewards from Government Inc.
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Cory Doctorow (Walkaway)
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Once upon a time, my government turned my city into a police state, kidnapped me, and tortured me. When I got free, I decided that the problem wasn’t the system, but who was running it. Bad guys had gotten into places of high office. We needed good apples. I worked my butt off to get people to vote for good apples. We had elections. We installed the kind of apples everyone agreed would be the kind of apples we could be proud of. They said good things. A few real dirtbags like Carrie Johnstone lost their jobs. And then, well, the good apples turned out to act pretty much exactly like the bad apples. Oh, they had reasons. There were emergencies. Circumstances. It was all really regrettable. But there were always emergencies, weren’t there?
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Cory Doctorow (Homeland (Little Brother, #2))
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I read my copy of On the Road and dug the scenery whizzing past. On the Road is a semi-autobiographical novel about Jack Kerouac, a druggy, hard-drinking writer who goes hitchhiking around America, working crummy jobs, howling through the streets at night, meeting people and parting ways. Hipsters, sad-faced hobos, con-men, muggers, scumbags and angels. There's not really a plot -- Kerouac supposedly wrote it in three weeks on a long roll of paper, stoned out of his mind -- only a bunch of amazing things, one thing happening after another. He makes friends with self-destructing people like Dean Moriarty, who get him involved in weird schemes that never really work out, but still it works out, if you know what I mean. There was a rhythm to the words, it was luscious, I could hear it being read aloud in my head. It made me want to lie down in the bed of a pickup truck and wake up in a dusty little town somewhere in the central valley on the way to LA, one of those places with a gas station and a diner, and just walk out into the fields and meet people and see stuff and do stuff.
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Cory Doctorow (Little Brother (Little Brother, #1))
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His life was absurd. He went all over the world accepting all kinds of bondage and escaping. He was roped to a chair. He escaped. He was chained to a ladder. He escaped. He was handcuffed, his legs were put in irons, he was tied up in a strait jacket and put in a locked cabinet. He escaped. He escaped from bank vaults, nailed-up barrels, sewn mailbags; he escaped from a zinc-lined Knabe piano case, a giant football, a galvanized iron boiler, a rolltop desk, a sausage skin. His escapes were mystifying because he never damaged or appeared to unlock what he escaped from. The screen was pulled away and there he stood disheveled but triumphant beside the inviolate container that was supposed to have contained him. He waved to the crowd. He escaped from a sealed milk can filled with water. He escaped from a Siberian exile van. From a Chinese torture crucifix. From a Hamburg penitentiary. From an English prison ship. From a Boston jail. He was chained to automobile tires, water wheels, cannon, and he escaped. He dove manacled from a bridge into the Mississippi, the Seine, the Mersey, and came up waving. He hung upside down and strait-jacketed from cranes, biplanes and the tops of buildings. He was dropped into the ocean padlocked in a diving suit fully weighted and not connected to an air supply, and he escaped. He was buried alive in a grave and could not escape, and had to be rescued. Hurriedly, they dug him out. The earth is too heavy, he said gasping. His nails bled. Soil fell from his eyes. He was drained of color and couldn't stand. His assistant threw up. Houdini wheezed and sputtered. He coughed blood. They cleaned him off and took him back to the hotel. Today, nearly fifty years since his death, the audience for escapes is even larger.
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E.L. Doctorow (Ragtime)
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But now I speculate re the ants' invisible organ of aggregate thought... if, in a city park of broad reaches, winding paths, roadways, and lakes, you can imagine seeing on a warm and sunny Sunday afternoon the random and unpredictable movement of great numbers of human beings in the same way... if you watch one person, one couple, one family, a child, you can assure yourself of the integrity of the individual will and not be able to divine what the next moment will bring. But when the masses are celebrating a beautiful day in the park in a prescribed circulation of activities, the wider lens of thought reveals nothing errant, nothing inconstant or unnatural to the occasion. And if someone acts in a mutant un-park manner, alarms go off, the unpredictable element, a purse snatcher, a gun wielder, is isolated, surrounded, ejected, carried off as waste. So that while we are individually and privately dyssynchronous, moving in different ways, for different purposes, in different directions, we may at the same time comprise, however blindly, the pulsing communicating cells of an urban over-brain. The intent of this organ is to enjoy an afternoon in the park, as each of us street-grimy urbanites loves to do. In the backs of our minds when we gather for such days, do we know this? How much of our desire to use the park depends on the desires of others to do the same? How much of the idea of a park is in the genetic invitation on nice days to reflect our massive neuromorphology? There is no central control mechanism telling us when and how to use the park. That is up to us. But when we do, our behavior there is reflective, we can see more of who we are because of the open space accorded to us, and it is possible that it takes such open space to realize in simple form the ordinary identity we have as one multicellular culture of thought that is always there, even when, in the comparative blindness of our personal selfhood, we are flowing through the streets at night or riding under them, simultaneously, as synaptic impulses in the metropolitan brain. Is this a stretch? But think of the contingent human mind, how fast it snaps onto the given subject, how easily it is introduced to an idea, an image that it had not dreamt of thinking of a millisecond before... Think of how the first line of a story yokes the mind into a place, a time, in the time it takes to read it. How you can turn on the radio and suddenly be in the news, and hear it and know it as your own mind's possession in the moment's firing of a neuron. How when you hear a familiar song your mind adopts its attitudinal response to life before the end of the first bar. How the opening credits of a movie provide the parameters of your emotional life for its ensuing two hours... How all experience is instantaneous and instantaneously felt, in the nature of ordinary mind-filling revelation. The permeable mind, contingently disposed for invasion, can be totally overrun and occupied by all the characteristics of the world, by everything that is the case, and by the thoughts and propositions of all other minds considering everything that is the case... as instantly and involuntarily as the eye fills with the objects that pass into its line of vision.
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E.L. Doctorow (City of God)