Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

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You added a note
2 months, 1 week ago

a Communist but a terribly nice man

[...] The result was that the people who came to their cocktail parties, at which Nancy served good hors d’oeuvres and rather poor cocktails, were presentable radicals and unpresentable conservatives—men in radio, men in advertising, lawyers with liberal ideas, publishers, magazine editors, writers…

—p.185 The Company She Keeps FIVE Portrait of the Intellectual as a Yale Man (165) by Mary McCarthy
You added a note
2 months, 1 week ago

no greater folly than conspicuous consumption

It did not occur to him, or, indeed, to anyone else, that he was taking the line of least resistance. This state of being unresolved, on call, as it were, was painful to him, and he used to envy his friends who, as he said, were “sure.” The inconsistencies he found whenever he examined his own thou…

—p.174 FIVE Portrait of the Intellectual as a Yale Man (165) by Mary McCarthy
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2 months, 1 week ago

queer in one of a hundred bitter, irremediable ways

[...] Most men had come to socialism by some all-too-human compulsion: they were out of work or lonely or sexually unsatisfied or foreign-born or queer in one of a hundred bitter, irremediable ways. They resembled the original twelve apostles in the New Testament; there was no real merit in their a…

—p.170 FIVE Portrait of the Intellectual as a Yale Man (165) by Mary McCarthy
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2 months, 1 week ago

the phenomenon known as the dissemination of ideas

In real life, his concerns were of a different order. The year he came down from Yale (where he could have been Bones but wouldn’t), he was worried about Foster and Ford and the Bonus Marchers and the Scottsboro Boys. He had also just taken a big gulp of Das Kapital and was going around telling peo…

—p.168 FIVE Portrait of the Intellectual as a Yale Man (165) by Mary McCarthy
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2 months, 1 week ago

the next morning the phone would wake you

You saw how profitable that exchange had been for you: it had earned you an enemy and, you thought, a lover. The first thing made you feel good, and the second saddened you. The next morning the phone would wake you and you would reach out and take it dreamily and it would be Erdman speaking very s…

—p.156 The Genial Host (135) by Mary McCarthy