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Yoko Ogawa,Stephen Snyder

The Memory Police

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  • nonhas quoted4 years ago
    No, don’t worry. It doesn’t hurt, and you won’t even be particularly sad. One morning you’ll simply wake up and it will be over, before you’ve even realized.
  • nonhas quoted4 years ago
    ‘Men who start by burning books end by burning other men,’
  • Yokosquawhas quoted10 months ago
    Though I’ve tried, I’ve found no way to fill in the voids left by the Memory Police.
  • finalfadeouthas quoted10 months ago
    “I thought I could hear the sound of my memory burning that night.”
  • finalfadeouthas quoted10 months ago
    “I remember hearing a saying long ago: ‘Men who start by burning books end by burning other men,’ ” I said.
  • finalfadeouthas quoted10 months ago
    There, behind your heartbeat, have you stored up all my lost memories?
  • finalfadeouthas quoted10 months ago
    In the end, however, it was the old woman’s prediction that turned out to be accurate. No matter how long we waited, spring never came, and we lay buried under the snow along with the ashes of the calendars.
  • cioohas quoted10 months ago
    “What can the people on this island create?” I went on. “A few kinds of vegetables, cars that constantly break down, heavy, bulky stoves, some half-starved stock animals, oily cosmetics, babies, the occasional simple play, books no one reads…Poor, unreliable things that will never make up for those that are disappearing—and the energy that goes along with them. It’s subtle but it seems to be speeding up, and we have to watch out. If it goes on like this and we can’t compensate for the things that get lost, the island will soon be nothing but absences and holes, and when it’s completely hollowed out, we’ll all disappear without a trace. Don’t you ever feel that way?”
  • cioohas quoted10 months ago
    At any rate, I was ready to give up for today and go to bed.
  • cioohas quoted10 months ago
    As we enjoyed our snack, we talked about all sorts of things—but most often we spoke of our memories. Of my mother and father, my old nurse, the observatory, sculptures, and the distant past when one could still take a boat to other places. But our memories were diminishing day by day, for when something disappeared from the island, all memory of it vanished, too. We divided the last bit of peach and repeated the same stories to each other, allowing the fruit to dissolve, ever so slowly, on our tongues.
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