“My father had a healthy disregard for social conventions: he once let me paint the house windows in rainbows with my watercolor set, to my mother's horror, and he'd clap for trees that he thought were doing a good job of exploding into red during the fall.”
Jennifer duBois“It was bewildering, the way that reality could be overtaken, wrestled down, and murdered by the sheer weight of possibility.”
Jennifer duBois“Well, we spent enough on gymnastics.''Christ, did we,' said Maureen. 'So many lessons.'So many lessons, it was true: art and music and ice-skating; Lily's every fleeting interest enthusiastically, abundantly indulged. Not to mention the many more practical investments--chemistry tutoring when she struggled, English enrichment when she excelled, SAT courses to propel her to the school and then, presumably, the career of her dreams. What costs had been sunk, what objections had been suppressed, to deliver their daughter into the open and waiting arms of her beautiful life.”
Jennifer duBois, Cartwheel“And anyway, the anticipation was always worse than the thing itself - the anticipation and the memory, of course. And the anticipation of the memory was maybe the worst part of all.”
Jennifer duBois, Cartwheel“Forgiveness was work, Eduardo told victims' families--but so, then, was love, and deciding what was right, and defending it. Recusing yourself from judgment so you won't be tainted by the aggressor's sin is the same as turning away from empathy so you won't be touched by the victim's pain.”
Jennifer duBois, Cartwheel“I think the only way to properly face doom is to be on time.”
Jennifer duBois, A Partial History of Lost Causes“But I find something compelling in the game's choreography, the way one move implies the next. The kings are an apt metaphor for human beings: utterly constrained by the rules of the game, defenseless against bombardment from all sides, able only to temporarily dodge disaster by moving one step in any direction.”
Jennifer duBois, A Partial History of Lost Causes“There's an intimacy in listening to somebody's lies, I've always thought--you learn more about someone from the things they wish were true than from the things that actually are.”
Jennifer duBois, A Partial History of Lost Causes“My father had a healthy disregard for social conventions: he once let me paint the house windows in rainbows with my watercolor set, to my mother's horror, and he'd clap for trees that he thought were doing a good job of exploding into red during the fall.”
Jennifer duBois, A Partial History of Lost Causes“We are inscrutable even to ourselves, I suppose.”
Jennifer duBois, A Partial History of Lost Causes“Sadness, forever unacknowledged, eventually becomes resentment.”
Jennifer duBois, A Partial History of Lost Causes