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, 2 weeks ago

they are all paid better here than elsewhere

[...] On the 23rd IBM in New York put at my disposal a Cadillac with a chauffeur and a technical expert from Turin to be my guide at Poughkeepsie, up in Westchester where IBM’s huge factory is. This is a factory with 10, 000 employees, like a medieval city, and in front of it is a huge carpark for …

—p.56 Hermit in Paris: Autobiographical Writings American Diary 1959–1960 (16) by Italo Calvino
You added a note
2 months, 2 weeks ago

eventually I will arrive at the Cadillac

[...] anyway this woman, who was young and Jewish but with a real feeling for nature, says a propos of The Baron in the Trees that she loves ‘to ride’, but never ‘rides’ because her husband never takes her, but that I must certainly know how to ‘ride’ well. I tell her that I have never been on a h…

—p.54 American Diary 1959–1960 (16) by Italo Calvino
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2 months, 2 weeks ago

the sad state of American literature

[...] We discuss the sad state of American literature, which is stifled by commercial demands: if you don’t write as the New Yorker demands, you don’t get published. Purdy published his first book of short stories at his own expense, then he was discovered in England by Edith Sitwell, and subsequen…

—p.49 American Diary 1959–1960 (16) by Italo Calvino
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2 months, 2 weeks ago

first of all a man has to know how to work Wall Street

[...] But this Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith is some place: it is a pity I am now too old, but something your children should do first thing is to work with them for a while to learn the trade (there is an enormous students’ office): send them for an apprenticeship with Merrill Lynch, Pierc…

—p.40 American Diary 1959–1960 (16) by Italo Calvino
You added a note
2 months, 2 weeks ago

stories about a search for human completeness

[...] The stories that I am interested in narrating are always stories about a search for human completeness, integration, to be achieved through trials that are both practical and moral at the same time, and that constitute something above and beyond all the alienation and division that is imposed…

—p.10 Questionnaire, 1956 (7) by Italo Calvino