A Quote by Perry DeAngelis

If you strip the horrors of history from history, the flip side of that is you strip the nobility of rising above such horrors. — © Perry DeAngelis
If you strip the horrors of history from history, the flip side of that is you strip the nobility of rising above such horrors.
Almost the whole of history is but a sequence of horrors.
Strip malls are history.
All other forms of history - economic history, social history, psychological history, above all sociology - seem to me history with the history left out.
The true horrors of human history derive not from orcs and Dark Lords, but from ourselves.
In its history, Europe has committed so many massacres and horrors that it should bow its own head in shame.
The best of humanity's recorded history is a creative balance between horrors endured and victories achieved, and so it was during the Harlem Renaissance.
He felt that the darkness was full of unimaginable horrors - and the trouble with unimaginable horrors was that they were only too easy to imagine.
A personal story of the horrors that Poles lived through during World War II. When God Looked the Other Way, above all else, explains why there is still a Poland. . . . One of the most remarkable World War II sagas I have ever read. It is history with a human face.
We humans have the capacity to wreak horrors on each other. But we also have the capacity to survive those horrors.
'Blade Runner' was a comic strip. It was a comic strip! It was a very dark comic strip. Comic metaphorically.
I did work in a strip club, but I didn't strip. I danced, and I became very popular.
I don't inflict horrors on readers. In my research, I've uncovered truly terrible documentations of cruelty and torture, but I leave that offstage. I always pull back and let the reader imagine the details. We all know to one degree or another the horrors of war.
I don't sleep enough, and it does... what is the opposite of wonders... horrors. It does horrors for my skin.
Actually, I used to be a busboy in a strip joint in New York and so I hate strip joints. I'm not that kind of person.
I don't enjoy lettering very much, but that's the way I write and that belongs in the strip because the strip is a reflection of me.
Stan Lee always wanted to do another syndicated strip while we were doing Spider-Man. I was working two jobs, and he wanted to make time to do another strip. He wanted to do a humor strip. I said, 'Stan, I barely make it through the week now. How the hell am I going to do another strip?' He said, 'Oh, I'm sorry, I always forget it takes you longer to do a page than it takes me to do twenty pages.'
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