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#ship

Read through the most famous quotes by topic #ship




Better be a nettle in the side of your friend than his echo.


Ralph Waldo Emerson


#friendship

That’s what happens to friends, eventually. They leave you. It’s practically what they’re for.


Catherynne M. Valente


#friendship

Friends never turn as enemies. If they did, they were never your friends at all.


Hark Herald Sarmiento


#friends #friendship #friendship

Saya akan pikul rahsia itu jika engkau percayakan kepada saya dan saya akan masukkan ke dalam perbendaharaan hati saya dan kemudian saya kunci pintunya erat-erat. Kunci itu akan saya lemparkan jauh-jauh sehingga seorang pun tak dapat mengambilnya kedalam lagi.


Hamka


#inspirational #secret #trust #friendship

The kindest way of helping yourself is to find a friend


Ann Kaiser Stearns


#friendship

Their friendship was only one aspect of their lives but it seemed to give meaning to all the others.


Ann Brashares


#friendship

She rides as a man, goes unveiled as a man, fights as a man. Let her prove herself worthy as a man, worthy of her weapons and of our friendship.


Tamora Pierce


#friendship

We are great writers on the same dreadful typewriter


Allen Ginsberg


#loyalty #madness #mental-illness #writing #friendship

Friends are those rare people who ask how we are, and then wait to hear the answer.


Ed Cunningham


#listening #friendship

Something that’s bothered me for a while now is the current profligacy in YA culture of Team Boy 1 vs Team Boy 2 fangirling. [...] Despite the fact that I have no objection to shipping, this particular species of team-choosing troubled me, though I had difficulty understanding why. Then I saw it applied to Suzanne Collins’s The Hunger Games trilogy – Team Peeta vs Team Gale – and all of a sudden it hit me that anyone who thought romance and love-triangles were the main event in that series had utterly missed the point. Sure, those elements are present in the story, but they aren’t anywhere near being the bones of it, because The Hunger Games, more than anything else, is about war, survival, politics, propaganda and power. Seeing such a strong, raw narrative reduced to a single vapid argument – which boy is cuter? – made me physically angry. So, look. People read different books for different reasons. The thing I love about a story are not necessarily the things you love, and vice versa. But riddle me this: are the readers of these series really so excited, so thrilled by the prospect of choosing! between! two! different! boys! that they have to boil entire narratives down to a binary equation based on male physical perfection and, if we’re very lucky, chivalrous behaviour? While feminism most certainly champions the right of women to chose their own partners, it also supports them to choose things besides men, or to postpone the question of partnership in favour of other pursuits – knowledge, for instance. Adventure. Careers. Wild dancing. Fun. Friendship. Travel. Glorious mayhem. And while, as a woman now happily entering her fourth year of marriage, I’d be the last person on Earth to suggest that male companionship is inimical to any of those things, what’s starting to bother me is the comparative dearth of YA stories which aren’t, in some way, shape or form, focussed on Girls Getting Boyfriends, and particularly Hot Immortal Or Magical Boyfriends Whom They Will Love For All Eternity. Blog post: Love Team Freezer


Foz Meadows


#hunger-games #love-triangles #shipping #ya #friendship






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