DaveAwl

Dave Awl · @DaveAwl

4th Feb 2011 from Twitlonger

#sa4qe From Russell Hoban's novel Pilgermann: “Mortal life is a difficult proposition because hardly anything can be experienced as what it actually is; everything is time-distorted. In childhood we wait for things that seem too long in coming, we wait for treats, for presents, for festivals and holidays, we wait for growing up. There is so much waiting that suddenly childhood itself is gone with all that was being waited for. As grown-ups we find ourselves pitched headlong down a steep and slippery slide with everything hurtling towards us at great speed; some things smash us full in the face, others streak past half-glimpsed or unseen; everything has happened before we were ready for it. Only after the hurly-burly of mortal life is over can one have a really good look at what has happened; unburdened by choice and unthreatened by consequences one is able to sort through the half-glimpses of a lifetime and find perhaps one or two workable fragments of recognition.”

More info on Pilgermann here:
http://j.mp/f5dfqE

Happy 86th birthday, Russell Hoban!
http://sa4qe.blogspot.com/

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