Yoko Ogawa

The Housekeeper and the Professor

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  • Лика Меликсетянhas quoted4 years ago
    He treated Root exactly as he treated prime numbers. For him, primes were the base on which all other natural numbers relied; and children were the foundation of everything worthwhile in the adult world.
  • Katehas quoted10 months ago
    he believed that mistakes were often as revealing as the right answers. This gave us confidence even when our best efforts came to nothing.
  • Faridahhas quoted2 years ago
    they were almost off-putting.
  • Faridahhas quoted2 years ago
    The mention of money was probably nothing more than a smoke screen.
  • Gabrysia Kowaczhas quoted3 years ago
    spill a great deal
  • Лика Меликсетянhas quoted4 years ago
    "So you think that zero was there waiting for us when humans came into being, like the flowers and the stars? You should have more respect for human progress. We made the zero, through great pain and struggle."
  • Yohanahas quoted7 years ago
    "That's right. Eleven."
    "An exquisite number. An especially beautiful prime among primes. And it was Murayama's number. Truly wonderful, don't you think?"
  • Yohanahas quoted7 years ago
    I could feel with my fingertip the elegant curl of the legs on the π, the certainty and strength of the dot on the i, the decisive way the 0 had been joined at the top.
  • Yohanahas quoted7 years ago
    He worked with precision and conviction, and even a kind of affection. His ironing seemed highly rational, with a constant speed that allowed him to get the best results with the least effort; all the economy and elegance of his mathematical proofs performed right there on the ironing board.
  • ;has quoted7 years ago
    "And there's more to it: the numbers in the first group can always be expressed as the sum of two squares, but those in the second can never be."
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