“You just know this is going to be bad," Susan said."—but when I went to college," Harry continued, throwing a piece of bread at Susan, "if your roommate died, you were usually allowed to skip your finals for that semester. You know, because of the trauma.""And oddly enough, your roommate got to skip them, too," Susan said. "For much the same reason.”
John Scalzi“Do what you need to do and enjoy life as it happens.”
John Scalzi“When I was 10, I was hit by a car, which turned my right tibia into a jigsaw puzzle.”
John Scalzi“Humor is rare in science fiction... there's so little of it that it automatically reminds you of other heroes with that acerbic humor when you find it.”
John Scalzi“Creativity eventually comes from the need not to have ourselves or other people eaten by leopards.”
John Scalzi“I'm more interested in becoming a commercial writer, and unfortunately, commentary on my writing from a bunch of other unpublished writers is of little utility in that regard. Being a better writer is something of a moot point, since if you're not a commercial writer to some extent, very few people will know whether your writing is any good or not.”
John Scalzi“The failure mode of clever is “asshole.”
John Scalzi“You say ‘cure.’ I hear ‘you’re not human enough.”
John Scalzi, Lock In“When you're a kid all you want to do is be somewhere else.”
John Scalzi, Lock In“Simply put, she was the one who had to put up with me. That she did so with love and patience and encouragement instead of strangling me, throwing my remains into a wood chipper, and then pretending she had never been married to me at all is a testament to the fact that she is, in fact, the single best person I know.”
John Scalzi, Lock In“Rich people show their appreciation through favors. When everyone you know has more money than they know what to do with, money stops being a useful transactional tool. So instead you offer favors. Deals. Quid pro quos. Things that involve personal involvement rather than money. Because when you're that rich, your personal time is your limiting factor.”
John Scalzi, Lock In