“You see, to find the brightest wisdom one must pass through the darkest zones. And through the darkest zones there can be no guide. No guide, that is, but courage”
Adam Gidwitz“Being the reader of a dark fairy tale is much like being the hero of one. Our lives are filled with pain, boredom, and fear. We want to venture into the dark wood, to see the oddities and the beauties it holds, and to test ourselves against them. So we pick up a book of fairy tales. The real ones. THe weird ones. The dark ones. We see oddities and beauties galore. We test our courage and our understanding. Finally, we put the book down and return to our lives. And hopefully, just like the hero of the fairy tale, we return stronger, richer, and wiser. In difficult times - of recession and violence and political bitterness - we long for a dark forest to which we can escape; and from which we can return, better than we were before.”
Adam Gidwitz, The Grimm Conclusion“For, in life, it is in the darkest zones one finds the brightest beauty and the most luminous wisdom.”
Adam Gidwitz, A Tale Dark & Grimm“Once upon a time, fairy tales were AWESOME!”
Adam Gidwitz, A Tale Dark & Grimm“You see, to find the brightest wisdom one must pass through the darkest zones. And through the darkest zones there can be no guide. No guide, that is, but courage”
Adam Gidwitz, A Tale Dark & Grimm“Sometimes, it turns out, the most important decisions in life are made by your dog.”
Adam Gidwitz, The Inquisitor's Tale: Or, the Three Magical Children and Their Holy Dog“There is something embarrassing about someone else's grief. It is hard to know what to do around it. The right answer, always, is hugs.”
Adam Gidwitz, The Inquisitor's Tale: Or, the Three Magical Children and Their Holy Dog“Whether you go your separate ways or stay together, you will continue to witness--against ignorance, against cruelty, and on behalf of all that is beautiful about this strange and crooked world.”
Adam Gidwitz, The Inquisitor's Tale: Or, the Three Magical Children and Their Holy Dog“How could he hate the Jews and yet feel sick when they were attacked? Louis hated peasants, too, apparently, and yet he had no problem sitting beside Jeanne - hoisting her in the air and dancing even. Jacob tried to turn this over in his head, around and around, like the cartwheels beneath him. But after a while, he gave up. People were too strange to understand, he decided. They were like life. And also that cheese. Too many things at once.”
Adam Gidwitz, The Inquisitor's Tale: Or, the Three Magical Children and Their Holy Dog