Showing posts with label feature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label feature. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Quote It! [NEW FEATURE!]

So I've been pondering a couple of more new feature ideas and one of them is here today! It is called Quote It! In this feature, I will be focusing on a specific book (or set of books) and adding the quotes below. I LOVE writing down quotes or conversations from books I read and trying to keep them - or take a picture of one and keep it - so I thought it would be fun to share them with all of you! Maybe you'll find a new quote that will inspire you, move you, or just make you smile!

The first book featured is

NOTE: The second to last quote in orange is a SPOILER!

Connecting takes energy. And it’s nothing against that specific person. Sometimes, you just don’t want to connect all the time.
–Adam (p.108)


I think people attach themselves to certain people, certain events, because those things have energy; they create an atmosphere. And there is a certain amount of energy that gets absorbed by an atmosphere.
–Drake (p.116)


You need to get out into the world. When you do that, the fences get wider and wider apart.
–Adam (p.157)


It can be good to see what else is out there. If only just to see it.
–Adam (p.158)


When something feels right, why, just because we’re turning a certain age, do we have to toss it all out in the name of some sort of adult success, in the name of growing up? Why do we always have to want something else, something better? What if it doesn’t actually get better? What if everyone out there is just lying to me and it really doesn’t get any better than this?
–Carter (p.158)



We're fascinated by the things we cant figure out, by the things that dont have a right or wrong answer. Even when we cant explain them, we need to make some sort of sense out of them create lists, find connections, map it out.

Maybe thats why, when we cant seem to figure out all sorts of other more commonplace mysteries (like why we all keep looking at the sky as if it might talk to us), we still need to try.

We think maybe its a lot like love, that need to make sense of the sky. We dont know why we need it, we cant explain it when it happens or when it doesnt happen, but we need it like we need air or food.

So we keep looking for it.
(p.159)



You can’t have fun all the time. Sometimes it’s hard. Sometimes it’s frustrating and miserable, sometimes people are mean, but you have to push through that. You’re talented. Sometimes being talented is just hard.
(p.186)


I didn’t really believe in the idea of regret because it was always based on what might have happened. People always held up the now, the concrete now, and compared it to what might have been, and that wasn’t a fair comparison.
(p.189)


…the stars give people a chance to imagine their own possibilities; they provide a reminder that each of us has the capacity to make our best future, to find our purpose.
(p.191)


I’m not sure we ever truly quit the things we love. We might not be practicing them, but that doesn’t mean we’ve quit them. I think, sometimes, things we love need to go dormant or come out in a different form for a while.
(Adam p.201)


…I was struck with how much we needed to know we were loved. We needed people to tell us, show us, remind us. I studied the stars wide above me, realizing it was because we knew how small we were that love mattered so much. Even when everything in the world pointed to the contrary, love carved out its own vast galaxy for us, made us the most important thing in it, at least to somebody.
(p.207)


I’d often wondered about peoples need to constantly remind themselves to be aware of living right now. It seemed sort of obvious to me. Of course we lived right now. When else would we be living?
(p.229)


It was weird to think one person might see me one way and another person might have a totally different impression of me based on a separate list of experiences.
(p.245)


Here’s a hint from Grown-up World. There’s no right way. Not really. Just perspective. We choose whether we succeed or fail. We do. It’s all our own spin on it. We create our own definition of success or failure. You can’t hold yourself up to other people’s versions of things. Not societies idea of things, and not other people’s. Your own. But regret…well, that’s a real thing. Take it from me. You should try things on, see if they fit you. If they don’t, it’s not failure. It’s a choice. But always let yourself have a choice, let yourself have possibilities. People say ‘Follow your dreams, blah blah blah,’ but no one’s checking up on that, no one’s out there with a clipboard saying, ‘Yes, Carter Moon. Dream followed!’ You’re accountable to yourself. So if you don’t ever take the chances, if you don’t ever at least try, you’re going to be sitting in that cafĂ© when you’re forty wondering about them.
(p.250)


‘People like a Hollywood ending, Carter.’

‘Not all people.’
‘But you do.’

He was right. I did. I loved a Hollywood ending. Love the montage where they figured everything out to the swell of music, the scenes from the beach or skyscraper where everything worked out the way it should. Simple, lovely – hopeful. The way I wished the whole world could be.


But this wasn’t a movie. In life, we didn’t get to have credits roll to tell us when we’d come to the end of our epiphany arc. To know when to applaud. In life, there were no credit, no sound tracks. In life, things often didn’t work out. My brother might never get better. I might make the list for my parents but not choose the right answer. Because there were no right answers.

That was the great thing about growing up. We got to write our own endings, thousands of them, over and over. That was life. It was a million little endings. But it was also a million little beginnings. Even when other people thought we were writing them wrong. I didn’t know if Adam and I could make our separate worlds work in the future, but for today – we had a tour to finish.

Not everyone liked a Hollywood ending.

But I did. As long as it was my Hollywood ending.
(p.296)

Friday, February 21, 2014

Around the World with... (February 2014) - NEW FEATURE!

Hey everyone! So as I said at the beginning of the month, I created a new feature for Unraveling Books! I love to travel and want to go all over the world one day and I also love books! So, I decided to find a new way to incorporate the two and came up with "Around the World with..." Each month I am going to feature one of you lovely book bloggers and ask you some questions about books and traveling. I am still fine tuning this feature so I hope to come up with more questions or change the questions as I do more of these! And I drew the logo in color but my scanner was acting weird so hopefully that will be fixed for next time!

So without further ado, here is...

Angie from Disquietus Reads! She is one of the first book bloggers I met last year during the Summer Lovin' RAT and we got to go to some of Wordstock together in Portland last year!

If you could travel anywhere in the world where would it be?
Ireland. There are tons of international countries I would love to travel to, but if I can only visit one of them, it would be the country of my ancestors. I've been obsessed with it ever since I was a kid, and am in fact going to use the next two years to save up and get everything in order so I can go for my 30th birthday.

If you were a city what city would you be?
Oooooooh. I love this question. I'm going to have to take the easy way and say I'd be my home town of Portland, OR. Just because.

Favorite place you’ve been to?
New York City. When I graduated from college back in 2009, my cousin surprised me with a trip there as my graduation present and it was the best vacation I've ever had. There was so much to see and do that I barely got to scratch the surface. I can't wait to go back.

Favorite setting in a book? Least favorite?
I love when books are set in the southern U.S., or small towns. Maybe because I've always wanted to live in a small town, and the southern part of the country is the one I've always wanted to visit and haven't. As for my least favorite, I'm not really sure I have one. Maybe space? Does that count. For someone who loves Sci-Fi as much as I do, I always struggle with books set in space.

Are you planning on traveling anywhere in 2014?
Oh lots of places, hopefully. I'm going to Seattle in February, and then in either late March/early April I'm going to go to Minnesota or Nebraska, or possibly Minnesota and then drive down to Nebraska for a couple days. In the summer I'm going to Sacramento and then in November I'm going to South Carolina. And that's just what I have planned right now.

Favorite book set in Europe? North America? Other place?
Ohhhhhhhh this is so hard. So I'll totally cheat and just choose my favorite books from the last year.

Favorite book set in Europe-Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein
Favorite book set in North America-Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell

If you were taking a road trip, what would be some of your must see tourist stops?
Hmmmmm it would depend on where I'm road tripping too, but if I were taking my dream road trip from Portland to Washington DC via the CA and the southern states, I would stop at a winery in northern California, and then obviously I would have to stop at Disneyland. I would also want to detour through both San Diego and Dallas, TX so I could go to the zoo in each city. I would also make sure to check out the Hot Springs National Park in Arkansas. And of course I would visit all of the touristy places in DC. Honestly, I'm sure there are tons more that I would stop at, but I've never really thought about it.

Favorite author? Where are they from?
Victoria Schwab, who is from Tennessee I believe.