Absently Anton runs his fingers over a lump that’s appeared on his neck the last fortnight and that he tries to obscure by raising the collar of his polo shirt. The last thing you need is to get sick in space. They’ll worry and send you home and, because you can’t fly back on your own, two others will have to go with you, and to cut short the missions of those two others would be unforgivable. He’ll say nothing to the flight surgeon or to his fellow crew and he’ll hope nobody notices. It’s the size of a cherry in the low hollow of his neck, and perfectly painless.
S. Harvey, Orbital (2024), loc. 1,359
My Commonplace Blog
A digital form of the sadly lost fashion for copying out memorable passages from texts. I kept losing my actual book.
Tuesday, 7 July 2026
The last thing you need is to get sick in space
Monday, 6 July 2026
From the space station’s distance mankind is a creature that comes out only at night
From the space station’s distance mankind is a creature that comes out only at night. Mankind is the light of cities and the illuminated filament of roads. By day, it’s gone. It hides in plain sight.
S. Harvey, Orbital (2024), loc. 302
Sunday, 5 July 2026
She would survive the blazing heat and tumble of her re-entry only to be pulled from her capsule and fold like a paper crane
S. Harvey, Orbital (2024), loc. 268
Saturday, 4 July 2026
They wield their language like a club against their enemies
J.M. Coetzee, Boyhood (1997), 124
Friday, 3 July 2026
Imagine having the power to command the ocean. It makes my fingers itch to possess it.
L. Holland, Sistersong (2021), 24
Thursday, 2 July 2026
The essence of Austria is not the center but the periphery
J. Roth, The Emperor's Tomb (1938), loc. 168
Wednesday, 1 July 2026
One could be a Nazi without ever seeing or thinking about Jews
It irked me that nobody in England seemed to grasp that Nazism had been about building a new world order based on the noble ideals I still found so satisfying. For it had not taken me many weeks in the country to discover that the English definition of Nazi could be summed up in a single word, ‘Jew-gasser’. That was so misguided, such a mistake. Yes, we were taught to despise Jews, but what English people didn’t seem to appreciate was that for Nazis like me everything to do with Jews had been a minor issue, that one could be a Nazi without ever seeing or thinking about Jews.
K. Fitzherbert, True to both my selves (1997), loc. 3630
I think about these kind of things a lot. The ability to see things selectively without even trying is underappreciated in historical (and political) analysis.