Robert Silverberg Dying Inside
Source: Dying Inside
Robert Silverberg is an American author and editor, best known for writing science fiction. He is a multiple winner of both Hugo and Nebula Awards, a member of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame, and a Grand Master of SF. He has attended every Hugo Awards ceremony since the inaugural event in 1953. Wikipedia

Robert Silverberg Dying Inside
Source: Dying Inside
Robert Silverberg book Lord Valentine's Castle
Book 4 “The Book of the Labyrinth”, Chapter 7 (p. 383)
Lord Valentine's Castle (1980)
“I find the world and all it contains extremely fascinating. Is this sinful?”
Section 4
Short fiction, Nightwings (1968)
“Anything big and strange always upsets the people in power.”
Source: Short fiction, Thomas the Proclaimer (1972), Chapter 6, “The Woman Who Is Sore at Heart Reproaches Thomas” (p. 91)
“It’s not a philosophy, Mr. Nichols. It’s an accommodation to the nature of reality.”
Robert Silverberg book The Stochastic Man
Source: The Stochastic Man (1975), Chapter 16 (p. 98)
Robert Silverberg book The Man in the Maze
Source: The Man in the Maze (1969), Chapter 1, section 2 (pp. 13-14)
“The universe is a perilous place. We do our best. Everything else is unimportant.”
Robert Silverberg book The Man in the Maze
Source: The Man in the Maze (1969), Chapter 12, section 4 (p. 179)
“We are born by accident into a purely random universe.”
Robert Silverberg book The Stochastic Man
Source: The Stochastic Man (1975), Chapter 1, (p. 1; opening words)
Robert Silverberg book The Man in the Maze
“Even earlier.”
Source: The Man in the Maze (1969), Chapter 4, section 3 (p. 73)
Robert Silverberg book The Man in the Maze
Source: The Man in the Maze (1969), Chapter 4, section 3 (p. 72)
Robert Silverberg book The Man in the Maze
Source: The Man in the Maze (1969), Chapter 6, section 8 (p. 89)
“You may not hold me guilty of sins committed in dreams.”
Robert Silverberg book A Time of Changes
Source: A Time of Changes (1971), Chapter 8 (p. 25)
“I hate no one, sir. It seems a waste of emotional energy.”
Source: Short fiction, The Emperor and the Maula (2007), p. 463
Robert Silverberg book Lord Valentine's Castle
Book 3 “The Book of the Isle of Sleep”, Chapter 2 (p. 231)
Lord Valentine's Castle (1980)
“Knowledge never injures the soul. It only purges that which encrusts and saps the soul.”
Robert Silverberg book A Time of Changes
Source: A Time of Changes (1971), Chapter 31 (p. 110)
Source: Short fiction, Against Babylon (1986), p. 276
“Love of others begins with love of self.”
Robert Silverberg book A Time of Changes
Source: A Time of Changes (1971), Chapter 35 (p. 126)
“Gottfried, like any true dictator, liked to surround himself with bland obliging ciphers.”
Robert Silverberg book The Stochastic Man
Source: The Stochastic Man (1975), Chapter 7 (p. 27)
Source: Short fiction, Thomas the Proclaimer (1972), Chapter 3, “The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters” (p. 76)
In Star Science Fiction 5, edited by Frederik Pohl, p. 53
Short fiction, Company Store (1959)
Robert Silverberg book Lord Valentine's Castle
Book 1, Chapter 12 (p. 93)
Lord Valentine's Castle (1980)
Robert Silverberg book The Man in the Maze
“I do.”
Source: The Man in the Maze (1969), Chapter 8 (p. 118)
Short fiction, Schwartz Between the Galaxies (1974)
Source: Short fiction, The Emperor and the Maula (2007), p. 443
Robert Silverberg book The Man in the Maze
Source: The Man in the Maze (1969), Chapter 8 (p. 120)
Source: Short fiction, Hot Times in Magma City (1995), p. 104
Short fiction, Born with the Dead (1974)
“All true enlightenment is illegal at first, within its context.”
Robert Silverberg book A Time of Changes
Source: A Time of Changes (1971), Chapter 31 (p. 110)
Robert Silverberg book Lord Valentine's Castle
Book 3, Chapter 11 (p. 329)
Lord Valentine's Castle (1980)
Robert Silverberg book A Time of Changes
Source: A Time of Changes (1971), Chapter 53 (p. 168)
Robert Silverberg book A Time of Changes
Source: A Time of Changes (1971), Chapter 27 (p. 89)
“She loaned him books. Worlds were revealed to him: worlds piled on worlds, worlds without end.”
Source: Short fiction, A Piece of the Great World (2005), p. 79
“Ignorance can’t be pardoned. Only cured.”
Robert Silverberg book Up the Line
Source: Up the Line (1969), Chapter 4
Source: Short fiction, Thomas the Proclaimer (1972), Chapter 11, “The March to the Sea” (p. 110)
Robert Silverberg book The Stochastic Man
Source: The Stochastic Man (1975), Chapter 3 (p. 11)
Source: Short fiction, Thomas the Proclaimer (1972), Chapter 3, “The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters” (p. 77)
“My only regrets were for poor tactics, not for faulty principles.”
Robert Silverberg book A Time of Changes
Source: A Time of Changes (1971), Chapter 70 (p. 204)
Short fiction, Schwartz Between the Galaxies (1974)
Robert Silverberg book A Time of Changes
Source: A Time of Changes (1971), Chapter 25 (p. 85)
“It is my craft and my science to Watch. It is yours to jeer. Each of us to our specialty.”
Section 1
Short fiction, Nightwings (1968)
“He didn’t have to observe the niceties of etiquette when talking to a computer.”
Short fiction, Born with the Dead (1974)
Robert Silverberg book Lord Valentine's Castle
Book 3, Chapter 8 (p. 301)
Lord Valentine's Castle (1980)
“Thus does the unyielding, inescapable future ineluctably devour the present.”
Robert Silverberg book The Stochastic Man
Source: The Stochastic Man (1975), Chapter 29 (p. 161)
"Sounding Brass, Tinkling Cymbal" in Hell's Cartographers (1975) edited by Brian Aldiss and Harry Harrison
Robert Silverberg book Lord Valentine's Castle
Book 3, Chapter 10 (p. 317)
Lord Valentine's Castle (1980)
Robert Silverberg book Lord Valentine's Castle
Book 1 “The Book of the King of Dreams”, Chapter 8 (p. 48)
Lord Valentine's Castle (1980)
Robert Silverberg book The Stochastic Man
Source: The Stochastic Man (1975), Chapter 13 (p. 73)
Section 5
Short fiction, Hawksbill Station (1967)
Short fiction, Schwartz Between the Galaxies (1974)
Robert Silverberg book Lord Valentine's Castle
Book 5, Chapter 6 (p. 442)
Lord Valentine's Castle (1980)
“Unacceptable, maybe. But not unthinkable. Nothing's unthinkable once somebody’s thought it.”
Short fiction, Born with the Dead (1974)
Source: Short fiction, Thomas the Proclaimer (1972), Chapter 3, “The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters” (p. 76)
Robert Silverberg book The Stochastic Man
Source: The Stochastic Man (1975), Chapter 8 (p. 33)
Robert Silverberg book The Man in the Maze
Source: The Man in the Maze (1969), Chapter 1, section 3 (p. 18)
“Never pass by a chance to shut up.”
Source: Short fiction, The Emperor and the Maula (2007), p. 477
Source: Short fiction, A Piece of the Great World (2005), p. 80
Robert Silverberg book The Stochastic Man
Source: The Stochastic Man (1975), Chapter 12 (p. 55)
“What matters,” he said earnestly, “is the display of skill, not the manners of the audience.”
Robert Silverberg book Lord Valentine's Castle
Book 1, Chapter 10 (p. 71)
Lord Valentine's Castle (1980)
Robert Silverberg book Lord Valentine's Castle
Book 5 “The Book of the Castle”, Chapter 4 (pp. 424-425)
Lord Valentine's Castle (1980)
“Moas aren’t very bright,” Gracchus answers. “That’s one good reason why they became extinct.”
Short fiction, Born with the Dead (1974)
Robert Silverberg book The Man in the Maze
Source: The Man in the Maze (1969), Chapter 1, section 3 (p. 17)
Source: Short fiction, Against Babylon (1986), p. 264
Source: Short fiction, Hot Times in Magma City (1995), p. 56


