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V.E. Schwab

The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue

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  • Jovana Antićhas quoted3 years ago
    What is a person, if not the marks they leave behind?
  • Paola Garduñohas quoted3 years ago
    There is a freedom, after all, in being forgotten
  • charlreadshas quotedlast year
    Books, she has found, are a way to live a thousand lives—or to find strength in a very long one.
  • reemooooohas quoted3 years ago
    “But isn’t it wonderful,” she says, “to be an idea?”
  • Amapolahas quoted5 days ago
    Books, she has found, are a way to live a thousand lives—or to find strength in a very long one.
  • Amapolahas quoted5 days ago
    “A dreamer,” scorns her mother.

    “A dreamer,” mourns her father.

    “A dreamer,” warns Estele
  • mhas quoted6 days ago
    when she died, he packed up all her books and brought them down to sell, and it’s like letting her go in pieces. Selling off his grief.
  • mhas quoted6 days ago
    There is a rhythm to moving through the world alone.

    You discover what you can and cannot live without, the simple necessities and small joys that define a life. Not food, not shelter, not the basic things a body needs—those are, for her, a luxury—but the things that keep you sane. That bring you joy. That make life bearable.

    Addie thinks of her father and his carvings, the way he peeled away the bark, whittled down the wood beneath to find the shapes that lived inside. Michelangelo called it the angel in the marble—though she’d not known that as a child. Her father had called it the secret in the wood. He knew how to reduce a thing, sliver by sliver, piece by piece, until he found its essence; knew, too, when he’d gone too far. One stroke too many, and the wood went from delicate to brittle in his hands.

    Addie has had three hundred years to practice her father’s art, to whittle herself down to a few essential truths, to learn the things she cannot do without.

    And this is what she’s settled on: she can go without food (she will not wither). She can go without heat (the cold will not kill her). But a life without art, without wonder, without beautiful things—she would go mad. She has gone mad.

    What she needs are stories.

    Stories are a way to preserve one’s self. To be remembered. And to forget.

    Stories come in so many forms: in charcoal, and in song, in paintings, poems, films. And books.

    Books, she has found, are a way to live a thousand lives—or to find strength in a very long one
  • ansari909081has quoted2 months ago
    She has prayed, and someone must have heard, for she is still free. Free from courtship, free from marriage, free from everything except Villon. Left alone to grow.

    And dream.
  • ansari909081has quoted2 months ago
    Adeline is sixteen now, and everyone speaks of her as if she is a summer bloom, something to be plucked, and propped within a vase, intended only to flower and then to rot. Like Isabelle, who dreams of family instead of freedom, and seems content to briefly blossom and then wither.
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