Living Dead Quotes

Quotes tagged as "living-dead" Showing 1-12 of 12
Isaac Marion
“All the shitty stuff people do to themselves... it can all be the same thing, you know? Just a way to drown out your own voice. To kill your memories without having to kill yourself.”
Isaac Marion, Warm Bodies

Carmen Maria Machado
“In this way, the Dream House was a haunted house. You were the sudden, inadvertent occupant of a place where bad things had happened. And then it occurs to you one day, standing in the living room, that you are this house's ghost: you are the one wandering from room to room with no purpose, gaping at the moving boxes that are never unpacked, never certain what you're supposed to do. After all, you don't need to die to leave a mark of psychic pain. If anyone is living in the Dream House now, he or she might be seeing the echo of you.”
Carmen Maria Machado, In the Dream House

R.L. Stine
“This was a normal town once, and we were normal people. Most of us worked at the plastics factory on the outskirts of town. Then one day there was an accident... something escaped from the factory, a yellow gas. It floated over the town so fast that we didn't see it, didn't realize... and then it was too late, and Dark Falls wasn't a normal town anymore.”
R.L. Stine, Welcome to Dead House

Max Brooks
“Feelings of any kind are not known to the walking dead. Every form of psychological warfare, from attempts at enraging the undead to provoking pity have all met with disaster. Joy, sadness, confidence, anxiety, love, hatred, fear—all of these feelings and thousands more that make up the human “heart” are as useless to the living dead as the organ of the same name. Who knows if this is humanity’s greatest weakness or strength? The debate continues, and probably will forever.”
Max Brooks, The Zombie Survival Guide: Complete Protection from the Living Dead

Matsime Simon Mohapi
“Poverty is what you see in the eyes of a Black child living in the squatter camp.Matsime Simon Mohapi”
Matsime Simon Mohapi, Poverty in the Land of Riches - South Africa

Elie Wiesel
“If I had spoken to him out loud, he would have understood the tragic fate of those who came back, left over, living dead. You must look at them carefully. Their appearance is deceptive. They are smugglers. They look like the others. They eat, they laugh, they love. The seek money, fame, love. Like the other. But it isn't true; they are playing, sometimes without even knowing it. Anyone who has seen what THEY have seen cannot be like the others, cannot laugh, love, pray, bargain, suffer, have fun, or forget. Like the others. You have to watch them carefully when they pass by an innocent-looking smokestack, or when they lift a piece of bread to their mouths. Something in them shudders and makes you turn your eyes away. These people have been amputated; they haven't lost their legs or eyes, but their will and their taste for life. The things they have seen will come to the surface again sooner or later. And then the world will be frightened and won't dare look these spiritual cripples in the eye.”
Elie Wiesel, All Rivers Run to the Sea

Mehmet Murat ildan
“A country where people are afraid of even their own shadows is surely a country of dictatorship! In such vile countries there are two groups of people: The zombies, the living-dead who serve the dictator and the rest, the clever and honourable people who fight for their freedom!”
Mehmet Murat ildan

Frank  Sonnenberg
“Apathetic people are among the living dead.”
Frank Sonnenberg, Soul Food: Change Your Thinking, Change Your Life

Paulo Freire
“The revolution loves and creates life; and in order to create life it may be obliged to prevent some men from circumscribing life. In addition to the life-death cycle basic to nature, there is almost an unnatural living death: life which is denied its fullness.”
Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of the Oppressed

“He might have been alive. He might have been dead. Either way, he looked as though he'd belonged to the graveyard for a long time.”
Shel Danielson, The Bell Tower Ghosts and Other Stories