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Gemina
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by Amie Kaufman (Goodreads Author)
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The Republic of T...
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by Scott Lynch (Goodreads Author)
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Red Seas Under Re...
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Michel Houellebecq
“He doesn't know it yet, but the infinity of childhood is brief.”
Michel Houellebecq, The Elementary Particles

John   Gray
“Nothing is more alien to the present age than idleness. If we think of resting from our labours, it is only in order to return to them.
In thinking so highly of work we are aberrant. Few other cultures have ever done so. For nearly all of history and all prehistory, work was an indignity.”
John Gray, Straw Dogs: Thoughts on Humans and Other Animals

Corey Taylor
“Things can get tough out there. I am in no way saying life is easy and we should breeze through it like a fart through silk filter; we are going to take our lumps and deal with our own unique adversity. What I am saying is that in all the chaos, remember to breathe, remember to smile, and remember that the only time to panic is when there is truly no tomorrow. Fortunately for the majority of us, tomorrow will always meet us in the morning with a cup of coffee and a fresh deck of cigarettes, ready to crack it's cocoon and mature into today. So ease the grip on your moralities and be yourself. Fantastic is really just the flaws. Nobody is perfect - not you, not me, not Jesus, Buddha, Jehovah, not God. But the great thing is that you do not have to be perfect to be alive, and that is what makes life absolutely perfect.”
Corey Taylor, Seven Deadly Sins: Settling the Argument Between Born Bad and Damaged Good

“Gratitude is a vaccine, an antitoxin, and an antiseptic.”
John Henry Jowett

James Gleick
“In the name of speed, Morse and Vail had realized that they could save strokes by reserving the shorter sequences of dots and dashes for the most common letters. But which letters would be used most often? Little was known about the alphabet’s statistics. In search of data on the letters’ relative frequencies, Vail was inspired to visit the local newspaper office in Morristown, New Jersey, and look over the type cases. He found a stock of twelve thousand E’s, nine thousand T’s, and only two hundred Z’s. He and Morse rearranged the alphabet accordingly. They had originally used dash-dash-dot to represent T, the second most common letter; now they promoted T to a single dash, thus saving telegraph operators uncountable billions of key taps in the world to come. Long afterward, information theorists calculated that they had come within 15 percent of an optimal arrangement for telegraphing English text.”
James Gleick, The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood

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Life in Outer Space by Melissa Keil
Asexuality in YA Fiction
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