Nick Harkaway Quotes

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  • There is a sense that everything should be easy, but easy decisions are the ones we should be scared of because if they're easy then we're probably being sold something. This is why I'm worried about "nudge" - it's pushing people in the direction of what you think they should be doing. Easy decisions are dangerous ones.

    Source: www.theguardian.com
  • The tree of nonsense is watered with error, and from its branches swing the pumpkins of disaster.

    "The Gone-Away World". Book by Nick Harkaway, June 2008.
  • A woman who can eat a real bruschetta is a woman you can love and who can love you. Someone who pushes the thing away because it's messy is never going to cackle at you toothlessly across the living room of your retirement cottage or drag you back from your sixth heart attack by sheer furious affection. Never happen. You need a woman who isn't afraid of a faceful of olive oil for that.

    Nick Harkaway (2008). “The Gone-Away World”, p.181, Random House
  • Google says young people don't care about privacy, but when asked if they'd let their parents see their phone bills and other stuff they say no.

    Source: www.theguardian.com
  • Never mind, never mind, let's get to the part where we smite the unrighteous. I've brought my most alarming teeth!

  • And don't tell me the end justifies the means because it doesn't. We never reach the end. All we ever get is means. That's what we live with.

  • That's what you get for ignoring the beauty of Tupperware.

    Nick Harkaway (2008). “The Gone-Away World”, p.103, Random House
  • Law is error, you see. It's an attempt to write down a lot of things everyone ought to know anyway.

    Nick Harkaway (2008). “The Gone-Away World”, p.109, Random House
  • I have known heaven, and now I am in hell, and there are mimes.

  • Ninjas are silly. They are the flower fairies of gong fu and karate.

    Nick Harkaway (2008). “The Gone-away World”, Random House
  • We need to create the institutions that will support the society we want to live in. The only answer is collective action.

    Source: www.theguardian.com
  • ARGH! There's no such thing [as writer's block]. Seriously: THERE. IS. NO. SUCH. THING. You know what there is? There's a bunch of problems, creative and otherwise, that can stop you writing. They are not block. They are important skills.

  • A desire for privacy does not imply shameful secrets; Moglen argues, again and again, that without anonymity in discourse, free speech is impossible, and hence also democracy. The right to speak the truth to power does not shield the speaker from the consequences of doing so; only comparable power or anonymity can do that.

    Nick Harkaway (2012). “The Blind Giant: Being Human in a Digital World”, p.145, Vintage
  • Newton's work on gravity led to the discovery of the Lagrange point, a place where opposing forces cancel one another out, and a body may remain at relative rest. This is where I am right now; the forces in my life confound one another. Better, for the moment, to be here and now, without history or future.

  • The problem isn't who is in charge. It's what is in charge. The problem is that people are encouraged to function as machines. Or, actually, as mechanisms. Human emotion and sympathy are unprofessional. They are inappropriate to the exercise of reason. Everything which makes people good - makes them human - is ruled out. The system doesn't care about people, but we treat it as if it were one of us, as if it were the sum of our goods and not the product of our least admirable compromises.

    Nick Harkaway (2008). “The Gone-away World”, Random House
  • It's not that any sufficiently advanced technology is magic, it's that any technology taking place beyond the threshold of our senses is.

  • I have wrangles with Facebook, entered fictitious trips because I can't get the map to get off my page, don't want people to know where I live. It is possible to carve out a space that's your own.

    Source: www.theguardian.com
  • I hover over the expensive Scotch and then the Armagnac, but finally settle on a glass of rich red claret. I put it near my nose and nearly pass out. It smells of old houses and aged wood and dark secrets, but also of hard, hot sunshine through ancient shutters and long, wicked afternoons in a four-poster bed. It's not a wine, it's a life, right there in the glass.

    Wine   Sunshine   Dark  
  • Children, bored and opinionated, are scholars of the most dogmatic stripe.

    Nick Harkaway (2008). “The Gone-Away World”, p.38, Random House
  • Photography is without mercy--though it's nonsense to say it does not lie. Rather, it lies in a particular, capricious way which makes beggars of ministers and gods of cat's meat men.

  • The trouble with shooting people, Edie Banister now remembers, is that it's so hard to do just one.

    "Angelmaker". Book by Nick Harkaway, February 2, 2012.
  • We should be worrying about if you live in the city you're more likely to have anxiety or mood disorders and to be schizophrenic. More than the problems people have from social media.

    Source: www.theguardian.com
  • The Brit abroad is always the voice of caution. Persons of other cultures are known to be undisciplined, prone to leaning out of car windows and cooking with garlic.

    Nick Harkaway (2014). “Tigerman: A novel”, p.17, Vintage
  • Nowhere have I ever heard of Satan taking the form of an avuncular hippie. No doubt he could. It just seems inefficient.

  • Piracy is robbery with violence, often segueing into murder, rape and kidnapping. It is one of the most frightening crimes in the world. Using the same term to describe a twelve-year-old swapping music with friends, even thousands of songs, is evidence of a loss of perspective so astounding that it invites and deserves the derision it receives.

  • In a lot of places, of course, the '80s had never really come to an end.

    Nick Harkaway (2014). “Tigerman: A novel”, p.164, Vintage
  • No. The moral of the story in so far as it has one is that cannibals can study logic, and that if you are going to leave the path, you better have your wits about you and know better than to trust the first scary old lady who talks to you in public.

    Nick Harkaway (2008). “The Gone-away World”, Random House
  • Society is based on discontent: people wanting more and more and more, being continually dissatisfied with their homes, their bodies, their decor, their clothes, everything.

  • People don't want children to know what they need to know. They want their kids to know what they ought to need to know. If you're a teacher you're in a constant battle with mildly deluded adults who think the world will get better if you imagine it is better. You want to teach about sex? Fine, but only when they're old enough to do it. You want to talk politics? Sure, but nothing modern. Religion? So long as you don't actually think about it. Otherwise some furious mob will come to your house and burn you for a witch.

  • I love you forever. I am sorry I cannot love you now.

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