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
8 months, 3 weeks ago

seeing each other was a terrible idea

Seeing each other was a terrible idea. We discovered that, instead of waning, desire had flared up and made a thousand demands with brazen urgency. If at a distance, on the telephone, words allowed us to fantasize, constructing glorious prospects but also imposing on us an order, containing us, fri…

—p.392 Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay (The Neapolitan Novels, #3) by Elena Ferrante
You added a note
8 months, 3 weeks ago

I felt sunk inside myself

He left an hour later, even though Pietro sullenly insisted that he stay, even though Dede burst into tears. My husband went to wash, and reappeared soon afterward ready to go out. Looking down he said: I didn’t tell the police that Pasquale and Nadia were in our house; and I did it not to protect …

—p.388 by Elena Ferrante
You added a note
8 months, 3 weeks ago

I felt like a drop of rain in a spiderweb

Nino stayed for ten days. Nothing of what happened in that time had anything to do with the yearning for seduction I had experienced years earlier. I didn’t joke with him; I didn’t act flirtatious; I didn’t assail him with all sorts of favors; I didn’t play the part of the liberated woman, modeling…

—p.374 by Elena Ferrante
You added a note
8 months, 3 weeks ago

a well-cooked dish to make his mouth water

So Nino had come with his wife; I was terrified by the comparison. I knew what I was like, I knew the crude physicality of my body, but for a good part of my life I had given it little importance. I had grown up with one pair of shoes at a time, ugly dresses sewed by my mother, makeup only on rare …

—p.365 by Elena Ferrante
You added a note
8 months, 3 weeks ago

the waste of intelligence

“You should leave your wife more time.”

“She has all day available.”

“I’m not kidding. If you don’t, you’re guilty not only on a human level but also on a political one.”

“What’s the crime?”

“The waste of intelligence. A community that finds it natural to suffocate with the care of home…

—p.361 by Elena Ferrante