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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4 months, 4 weeks ago

dead by the time I was thirty

'As I crack up out of that 100 per cent revolutionary, I notice I crack up into aspects of everything I hate. That's because I've never lived with my eye on becoming what is known as mature. I've spent all my life, until recently, preparing myself for the moment when someone says: "Pick up that rif…

—p.595 The Golden Notebook THE GOLDEN NOTEBOOK (581) by Doris Lessing
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4 months, 4 weeks ago

large enough to include all sorts of things

[...] I said, as I had said before: 'Don't you think it's extraordinary that we are both people whose personalities, whatever that word may mean, are large enough to include all sorts of things, politics and literature and art, but now that we're mad everything concentrates down to one small thing,…

—p.571 FREE WOMEN: 4 (483) by Doris Lessing
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4 months, 4 weeks ago

when one writes about oneself

[...] I remember thinking it was odd that his diaries ran chronologically, not all split up like mine are. I leafed through some of the earlier ones, not reading them, but getting an impression, an unending list of new places, different jobs, an endless list of girls' names. And as a thread through…

—p.545 FREE WOMEN: 4 (483) by Doris Lessing
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4 months, 4 weeks ago

a disease I could choose not to have

[...] I went to bed deciding that to fall in love with this man would be stupid. I was lying in bed examining the phrase 'in love' as if it were the name of a disease I could choose not to have.

—p.533 FREE WOMEN: 4 (483) by Doris Lessing
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4 months, 4 weeks ago

necessary to feel these emotions ambiguously

But it isn't only the terror everywhere, and the fear of being conscious of it, that freezes people. It's more than that. People know they are in a society dead or dying. They are refusing emotion because at the end of every emotion are property, money, power. They work and despise their work, and …

—p.521 FREE WOMEN: 4 (483) by Doris Lessing