Top 10 Quotes & Sayings by Jeet Thayil

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an Indian novelist Jeet Thayil.
Last updated on December 18, 2024.
Jeet Thayil

Jeet Thayil is an Indian poet, novelist, librettist and musician. He is best known as a poet and is the author of four collections: These Errors Are Correct, English, Apocalypso and Gemini. His first novel, Narcopolis,, which won the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature, was also shortlisted for the 2012 Man Booker Prize and The Hindu Literary Prize.

We're waiting for a glance or a word, some acknowledgement that we are here.
How will the ships navigate without stars? And then he remembered that the stars were dead, long dead, and the light they shed was not to be trusted, was false, if not an outright lie, and in any case was inadequate, unequal to its task, which was to illuminate the evil that men did.
Drugs are a bad habit, so why do it? Because, said Dimple, it isn't the heroin that we're addicted to, it's the drama of the life, the chaos of it, that's the real addiction and we never get over it; and because when you come down to it, the high life, that is, the intoxicated life, is the best of the limited options offered.
The world is on fire; time is a bomb.
Ten thousand years are not enough
When so much remains to be done — © Jeet Thayil
The world is on fire; time is a bomb. Ten thousand years are not enough When so much remains to be done
I found Bombay and opium, the drug and the city, the city of opium and the drug Bombay
Come on, a 25-page digression on god? You can’t have that kind of thing, cut it out!”
All I did was write it down, one word after the other, beginning and ending with the same one, Bombay.
My religion is no way of knowing me.
Because now there's time enough not to hurry, to light the lamp and open the window to the moon and take a moment to dream of a great and broken city, because when the day starts its business I'll have to stop, these are night-time tales that vanish in the sunlight like vampire dust
Then there are the addicts, the hunger addicts, the rage addicts, the poverty addicts, and power addicts, and the pure addicts who are addicted not to substances but to the oblivion and the tenderness the substances engender. An addict, if you don't mind me saying so, is like a saint. What is a saint but someone who has cut himself off, voluntarily, from the world's traffic and currency?
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