“Spare me the nostalgia.”
Source: From Time to Time (1995), Chapter 4 (p. 58)
Context: I hate that word. You know who uses it mostly? Time patriots. Same people who live in the best country in the world. Must be the best because that’s where they live. And they live in the best of times; has to be best because it’s their lifetime. You even suggest there just might have been better times than here and now, and it’s ‘nostalgia, nostalgia.’ Don’t even know what the word means. Means overly sentimental, for crysakes.
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Jack Finney 15
Novelist, short story writer 1911–1995Related quotes

“Nostalgia is an illness
for those who haven't realized
that today
is tomorrow's nostalgia.”
"Déjà Views", in Reflections in a Jaundiced Eye (1989), p. 112

Quote from: http://nymag.com/arts/art/features/47184/index3.html
undated quotes

New York Times Magazine, December 20, 1964.
1960s

"Nostalgia" (《乡愁》, "Xiangchou"), in The Isle Full of Noises: Modern Chinese Poetry from Taiwan, ed. and trans. Dominic Cheung (New York: Columbia University Press, 1987), p. 51

“Nostalgia: How long's that been around?”
Is It Bill Bailey? (TV, 1998)

Brand, Stewart. "McLuhan's last words". New Scientist, 29 Jan 1981.
1980s