“Real life is not quite as it is in stories. In the old tales, bad things happen, and when the tale has unfolded and come to its triumphant conclusion, it is as if the bad things had never been. Life is not as simple as that, not quite.”

Source: Daughter of the Forest

Last update Aug. 4, 2024. History

Help us to complete the source, original and additional information

Do you have more details about the quote "Real life is not quite as it is in stories. In the old tales, bad things happen, and when the tale has unfolded and com…" by Juliet Marillier?
Juliet Marillier photo
Juliet Marillier 40
New Zealand fiction writer 1948

Related quotes

Matthew Stover photo
Sarah Dessen photo
Maureen Johnson photo
Anastacia photo
Darren Shan photo
Suraj Sani photo

“Nothing could have prepared me for the reality of the situation here. Now that I am experiencing these things with you in real life, It’s as if these fairy tales left out the most interesting parts of their stories.”

Suraj Sani (1996) Nigerian writer, Spoken word artist

https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/10937455-nothing-could-have-prepared-me-for-the-reality-of-the/

Harlan Ellison photo

“This was reality, an only reality for a man whose existence had been not quite bad, merely insufficient, tenable but hardly enriching. For a man who had lived a life of not quite enough, this was all there ever could be of goodness and brilliance and light.”

Harlan Ellison (1934–2018) American writer

Delusion for a Dragon Slayer (1966)
Context: Griffin stood silently, watching the waterfall, sensing more than he saw, understanding more than even his senses could tell him. This was, indeed, the Heaven of his dreams, a place to spend the rest of forever, with the wind and the water and the world another place, another level of sensing, another bad dream conjured many long times before. This was reality, an only reality for a man whose existence had been not quite bad, merely insufficient, tenable but hardly enriching. For a man who had lived a life of not quite enough, this was all there ever could be of goodness and brilliance and light. Griffin moved toward the falls.
The darkness grew darker.

Barbara Kingsolver photo
Elizabeth Loftus photo

“In real life, as well as in experiments, people can come to believe things that never really happened.”

Elizabeth Loftus (1944) American cognitive psychologist

Source: Eyewitness Testimony (1979), p. 62

Related topics