Top 9 Quotes & Sayings by Emily St. John Mandel

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Canadian novelist Emily St. John Mandel.
Last updated on December 25, 2024.
Emily St. John Mandel

Emily St. John Mandel is a Canadian novelist and essayist. She has written numerous essays and six novels, including Station Eleven (2014) and The Glass Hotel (2020). Station Eleven, which has been translated into 33 languages, has been adapted into a limited series on HBO Max, which premiered on December 16, 2021. The Glass Hotel was translated into 20 languages and selected by Barack Obama as one of his favorite books from the year 2020.

No one ever thinks they’re awful, even people who really actually are. It’s some sort of survival mechanism.
First we only want to be seen, but once we’re seen, that’s not enough anymore. After that, we want to be remembered.
Hell is the absence of the people you long for. — © Emily St. John Mandel
Hell is the absence of the people you long for.
Love is like the lion’s tooth.
I stood looking over my damaged home and tried to forget the sweetness of life on Earth.
No more Internet. No more social media, no more scrolling through litanies of dreams and nervous hopes and photographs of lunches, cries for help and expressions of contentment and relationship-status updates with heart icons whole or broken, plans to meet up later, pleas, complaints, desires, pictures of babies dressed as bears or peppers for Halloween. No more reading and commenting on the lives of others, and in so doing, feeling slightly less alone in the room. No more avatars.
If you are the light, if your enemies are darkness, then there’s nothing that you cannot justify. There’s nothing you can’t survive, because there’s nothing that you will not do.
What I mean to say is, the more you remember, the more you’ve lost.
There are certain qualities of light that blur the years.
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