(Part 2) Best products from r/quotes

We found 23 comments on r/quotes discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 56 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

Top comments mentioning products on r/quotes:

u/DigitalSuture · 2 pointsr/quotes

yes, nothing can be pure original. Even the artist emotions are responses to stimuli that have shaped their opinion. It might be a unique perspective since there might not be many in a similar situation, but i bet if people dig around- they will find that others share their predicament.

Read "The Black Swan" by Nassim Taleb; great book and he talks about all the failures that no one sees- it leads to optimism.

u/irishjack777 · 3 pointsr/quotes

just because he was and is classed by many as a sexual deviant (and nothing more) does not mean he had/has nothing to say. check out john phillips' excellent the marquis de sade: a very short introduction. it's from the very short introductions series from oxford university press, which are always compelling. phillips offers a simple but cogent argument for why de sade should be treated as a serious philosophical figure.

definitely worth the read.

u/dorky2 · 2 pointsr/quotes

I have this book and it's delightful.

u/gnorrn · 2 pointsr/quotes

This was chosen by journalist Jeffrey S. Young as the title of his 1987 unauthorized biography of Jobs. The very similar saying "The journey is its own reward" is found from the nineteenth century.

u/zjs · 28 pointsr/quotes

> "To you, I was just a chapter; to me, you were the whole book."

Google shows 5 results, including this thread, vs. 12,500 for the OP's phrasing (including Goodreads).

The actual quote, from To Be Sung Underwater, is "For you, I was a chapter—a good chapter maybe, or even your favorite chapter, but, still, just a chapter—and for me, you were the book.".

I can't find an online version of the book to cite, but you can see the quote in the Amazon description for the book.


u/visvavasu · 1 pointr/quotes

You've stumbled onto something I have been striving to learn about all my life. You might enjoy this book: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Enough-Breaking-Free-World-Excess/dp/0340935928

u/punamenon2 · 1 pointr/quotes

The people I'm talking about do hold Ph.D's and teach in prestigious universities. Bullshitting is as an ingrained feature of intellectualism.

u/Devdogg · 2 pointsr/quotes

This comes from his espn2 articles; many of which were compiled into Hey Rube and it is a very good read.

u/Arsonade · 2 pointsr/quotes

Glad you like it, sorry though, I don't know of any online versions.

Edit: I know it's a late edit, but this is the book I got the quote from.

u/jmtphoto · 1 pointr/quotes

The book A First Rate Madness talks at length about great leaders in times of crisis who went through depression. Having to endure enabled, or rather forced, them to develop a deeper level of empathy or resolve. It's a great read about the positives of mental illness that not many people are discussing.
Here's a link to the book on Amazon if it piqued your interest:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0143121332/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?qid=1459228791&sr=8-1&pi=SY200_QL40&keywords=a+first+rate+madness&dpPl=1&dpID=518LWMl9xBL&ref=plSrch

u/CommentMan · 3 pointsr/quotes

I saw this in a 'Life in Hell' (I think this particular compilation was 'Love is Hell') comic strip a few years before the Simpsons. Still Matt Groening tho, and still funny.

A sample: http://www.fussy.org/girlfriends.jpg

The book: http://www.amazon.com/Love-Hell-Matt-Groening/dp/0679756655

u/Hippoponymous · 2 pointsr/quotes

It's from the book "Something Wonderful Right Away" by Jeffrey Sweet about the Second City improv group. This quote in particular comes from the founder, Paul Sills.

Edit: Accidentally linked to a review rather than the book.

u/GiveYourBestEffort · 2 pointsr/quotes

When you have a chance grab a copy of this book. I've read it a dozen times. I just bought 4 more copies as Christmas presents for all my grandchildren old enough to read

http://www.amazon.com/When-Pride-Still-Mattered-Lombardi/dp/0684870185

u/campushippo · 3 pointsr/quotes

You should try The End of Alice by A.M. Homes. It's incredibly disturbing, but very well written.

u/audiyon · 5 pointsr/quotes

Meditations is probably his most famous work. I think it's a collection of various works of his throughout his life.