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April 10, 2026
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"If he couldnât go back, he would just have to do things differently going forward. He felt how infinitely safer and more sound this attitude was. The trick was just not wanting anything. That was power. That was courage: the courage not to love anyone or hope for anything. The funny thing about it was how easy everything got, when nothing mattered."
"To be honest, Quentin felt superior to anybody who still messed around with magic. They could delude themselves if they liked, those self-indulgent magical mandarins, but heâd outgrown that stuff. He wasnât a magician anymore, he was a man, and a man took responsibility for his actions."
"In different ways they had both discovered the same truth: that to live out childhood fantasies as a grown-up was to court and wed and bed disaster."
"The irony was quite comprehensively hideous."
"Nobody can be touched by that much power without being corrupted."
"âI have a hard time believing that the history of the universe is being written by a talking rabbit,â Eliot said. âThough that would explain a lot.â"
"Though the funny thing about never being asked for anything is that after a while you start to feel like maybe you donât have anything worth giving."
"She was dipping a toe in the pool of bad behavior in finding the temperature was just right. It was fun being a problem. Julia had been very very good for a very long time, and the funny thing about that was, if youâre too good too much of the time, people start to forget about you. Youâre not a problem, so people can strike you off their list of things to worry about. Nobody makes a fuss over you. They make a fuss over the bad girls."
"It was fair to call it depression. She felt like shit, all the time. If that was depression, she had it. It must have been contagious. Sheâd caught it from the world."
"If this was madness it was an entirely new kind of madness, as yet undocumented in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. She had nerdophrenia. She was dorkotic."
"Could the man really not have explained? Did his daughter really not understand what had happened? It didnât add up. If theyâd talked about it and figured things out it could have been a happy ending. People in fairy tales never just figured things out."
"âWhat do you call this style?â Quentin asked. âThe mistake people make,â Bingle said, âis thinking that there are different styles.â âAll right.â âForce, balance, leverage, momentumâthese principles never change. They are your style.â"
"That was the thing about the world: it wasnât that things were harder than you thought they were going to be, it was that they were hard in ways that you didnât expect."
"âBe careful what you learn from me,â he said. âWhat is written with a sword cannot be erased.â"
"He wondered where this feeling was coming from, that he was improvising his part in a play that everybody else had a script for."
"The sun set. The car smelled of its ownerâs cigarette smoke. Everything was toxic and chemical and unnatural: the plastic walnut trim, the electric lights, the burning gasoline that was shoving them forward. This whole world was a processed petroleum product."
"He had gotten it so easy, and she had it so hard, and why? There was no good reason. He passed a test, and she failed it. That was a judgment on the test, not on her, but now her life was a waking nightmare, and he had everything he ever wanted. He was living a fantasy. Her fantasy. She wanted it back."
"Venice was the only city heâd ever seen that looked the same in real life as it did in pictures. It was consoling that something in this world met expectations."
"He couldnât ignore how conspicuously beautiful Venice was. People had been living here for what, a thousand years? More? God only knew whose crazy idea it was to build a city in the middle of a lagoon, but you couldnât argue with the results."
"âI started hanging out with this one girl, big-time warrior for one of the cities. She was very into the magic thing. And also I guess their menfolk werenât especially well-endowed in the hardware aisle, if you take my meaning.â âI believe I grasp the essence of it, yes,â Quentin said."
"Everybody wanted to be the hero of their own story. Nobody wanted to be comic relief."
"They were joined by Julia, who kept her sunglasses on and ate only marmite, straight from the jar, which if anything seemed like further proof of her declining humanity."
"Specifically she was into dragons. Quentin suppose it was an extension of the general Australian preoccupation with fatally dangerous animals. Start with saltwater crocodiles and box jellyfish and it was just a hop, skip, and a jump up the food chain before you got to dragons."
"Welcome to Facelessbook: an antisocial network."
"It was too terrible to think about, so she dealt with it by not thinking about it."
"Magic: it was what happened when the mind met the world, and the mind won for a change."
"Sheâd gotten good at coaxing. If all else failed she had the power of the bathroom handjob, and she wielded it with an iron fist."
"This was bad behavior, and she knew it. She did it because she was angry and because she disliked herself. The more she disliked herself, the more she took it out on other people, and the more she took it out on other people the more she disliked herself."
"The man was obviously a soldier, but Quentin had never really thought about what that meant. He was a professional killer, efficient and businesslike. He had none of Bingleâs elegance. He was like a baker, except instead of making bread he made corpses, and he wanted to make Quentin into one."
"He threw his sword away. Screw swords. A magician doesnât need a sword. A magician doesnât need anything but whatâs inside him."
"âAnyway, whatâs wrong with a little unreality?â Quentin said. âUnreality is underrated.â"
"âIs that God?â Poppy said. âThat is a god,â Penny corrected her. âThough that is really just a term to describe a magician operating on a titanic power scale.â"
"âA big silvery janitor. Penny, this canât be how the universe works.â âIn the Order we call it âinverse profundity.â Weâve observed it in any number of cases. The deeper you go into the cosmic mysteries, the less interesting everything gets.â"
"âI donât think they can change their minds. When you get to that level of power and knowledge and perfection, the question of what you should do next gets increasingly obvious. Everything is very rule-governed. All you can ever do in any given situation is the most gloriously perfect thing, and thereâs only one of them. Finally there arenât any choices left to make at all.â âYouâre saying the gods donât have free will.â âThe power to make mistakes,â Penny said. âOnly we have that. Mortals.â"
"âTell me, whatâs the first thing a hacker does once he breaks into a system?â âI donât know,â Quentin said. âHe steals a bunch of credit card numbers and subscribes to a lot of really premium porn sites?â âHe sets up a back door.â It was good to know that even having attained enlightenment Penny was still impervious to humor. âSo that if heâs ever locked out, he can get back in.â"
"Thatâs when they turned to religion. At this Julia pushed her chair back from the table. She could feel her intellectual gag reflex about to kick in."
"Religion had never been a subject that interested Julia. She considered herself too smart to believe in things she had no evidence for, and that behaved in ways that violated every principle sheâd ever observed or heard plausibly spoken about. And she considered herself too tough-minded to believe in things just because they made her feel better. Magic was one thing. With magic you were at least looking at reproducible results. But religion? That was about faith. Uneducated guesses made by weak minds."
"Forget everything you ordinarily associate with religious study. Strip away all the reverence and the awe and the art and the philosophy of it. Treat the subject coldly. Imagine yourself to be a theologist, but a special kind of theologist, one who studies gods the way an entomologist studies insects. Take as your dataset the entirety of world mythology and treat it as a collection of field observations and statistics pertaining to a hypothetical species: the god. Proceed from there."
"You know what Arthur C. Clarke said about technology and magic, right? Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. Turn it around. What is advanced magic indistinguishable from? Any sufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from the miraculous."
"Apparently if youâre enough of a power nerd, there is nothing that cannot be flowcharted."
"Where was the line between a spell and a miracle?"
"By now he had learned enough to know that when he was getting annoyed at somebody else, it was usually because there was something that he himself should be doing, and he wasnât doing it."
"You know what women are like? Theyâre like those long, skinny blocks you get in Tetris, the ones made out of four blocks straight in a row. First when you need them you canât get any, then when you donât need them anymore theyâre fucking everywhere and you donât know what to do with them."
"The dead didnât mince words."
"âYou went down the slide?â Benedict nodded. Quentin was evolving a theory about that. The slide was humiliating, thatâs what it was. Deliberately embarrassing. Thatâs what death did, it treated you like a child, like everything you had ever thought and done and cared about was just a childâs game, to be crumpled up and thrown away when it was over. It didnât matter. Death didnât respect you. Death thought you were bullshit, and it wanted to make sure you knew it."
"Nothing. Blue screen of death: sheâd crashed his system. Oh, well. Boys were so unstable that way, full of buggy, self-contradictory code, pathetically unoptimized."
"It was strange to be naked in front of Pouncy after all the time theyâd spent together clothed. It was strange to be naked in front of anybody. It was like that cold water out there in the bay: scary, you didnât think you could stand it, but then you plunged in and pretty soon you got used to it. There was enough hiding in life. Sometimes you just wanted to show somebody your tits."
"Iâll plead insanity. I can back it up."
"She wore a simple flowing white gown. So did everybody else. Gummidgy also wore a crown of mistletoe. So your basic Golden Bough deal, Julia thought. Fucking mistletoe. She never saw what all the fuss was about. Sure, itâs pretty enough, but at the end of the day itâs still a botanical parasite that strangles its host."
"Everywhere you looked there was so much richness, you could never exhaust it. Maybe it was all a game, that got crumpled up and thrown away at the end, but while you were here it was real."
Heute, am 12. Tag schlagen wir unser Lager in einem sehr merkwĂźrdig geformten HĂśhleneingang auf. Wir sind von den Strapazen der letzten Tage sehr erschĂśpft, das Abenteuer an dem groĂen Wasserfall steckt uns noch allen in den Knochen. Wir bereiten uns daher nur ein kurzes Abendmahl und ziehen uns in unsere Kalebassen-Zelte zurĂźck. Dr. Zwitlako kann es allerdings nicht lassen, noch einige Vermessungen vorzunehmen. 2. Aug.
- Das Tagebuch
Es gab sie, mein Lieber, es gab sie! Dieses Tagebuch beweist es. Es berichtet von rätselhaften Entdeckungen, die unsere Ahnen vor langer, langer Zeit während einer Expedition gemacht haben. Leider fehlt der grĂśĂte Teil des Buches, uns sind nur 5 Seiten geblieben.
Also gibt es sie doch, die sagenumwobenen Riesen?
Weil ich so nen Rosenkohl nicht dulde!
- Zwei auĂer Rand und Band
Und ich bin sauer!