Author: Roy Kesey
Cites
- Thomas Carlyle (1)
- IN: Pacazo (2011) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: (I)t is an ever-living, ever-working Chaos of Being, wherein shape after shape bodies itself forth from innumerable elements.
FROM: "On History", (1830), Essay, UK
- Mario Vargas Llosa (1)
- IN: Pacazo (2011) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: The foxes of the Sechura Desert howl like demons when night falls, and do you know why? To break the silence that terrifies them.
FROM: The Time of the Hero, (1963), Novel, Peru
- Paul Ricoeur (1)
- IN: Pacazo (2011) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: The solution is elegant -- but how laborious, how costly, and how fragile!
FROM: Time and Narrative, (1983), Book, France
- Julio Ramon Ribeyro (1)
- IN: Pacazo (2011) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: "It's good to laugh," he said, "but there are some things one must never forget: that even the mouths of children will one day fill with maggots, for example, and that the house of the master will be turned into a cabaret by his disciples."
FROM: Men and Bottles, (1964), Short Story, Peru
- Hayden White (1)
- IN: Pacazo (2011) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: (I)t is often overlooked that the coviction that one can make sense of history stands on the same level of epistemic plausibility as the conviction that it makes no sense whatsoever.
FROM: The Content of the Form, (1987), Book, US
- Julio Cortázar (1)
- IN: Pacazo (2011) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: The terrors, what a luxury for the imagination.
FROM: Hopscotch, (1963), Novel, Argentina
- Carlo Ginzburg (1)
- IN: Pacazo (2011) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: (T)he oldest act in the intellectual history of the human race: the hunter squatting on the ground, studying the tracks of his quarry.
FROM: Clues: Roots of an Evidential Paradigm, (1986), Essay, Italy