Italo Calvino on the human story
December 3, 2017
Amanda Sarasien posted this quote on Facebook and I immediately copied it to paste here because it captures so elegantly the sense I have of the interconnectedness of us all."But how to establish the exact moment in which a story begins? Everything has already begun before, the first line of the first page of every novel refers to something that has already happened outside the book. Or else the real story is the one that begins ten or a hundred pages further on, and everything that precedes it is only a prologue. The lives of individuals of the human race form a constant plot, in which every attempt to isolate one piece of living that has a meaning separate from the rest - for example, the meeting of two people, which will become decisive for both - must bear in mind that each of the two brings with himself a texture of events, environments, other people, and that from the meeting, in turn, other stories will be derived which will break off from their common story." ~ Italo Calvino, If on a Winter's Night a Traveler
Then I went searching for an image to somehow illustrate this quote and found Shirley Anne Sherris's "Woven Text Box" image.