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Truth: A Collection Of Quotes: From Abraham Lincoln, Aristotle, C.G. Jung, Carl Sagan, Ernest Hemingway, George Carlin, Isaac Newton, John Lennon, Lao Tzu, Gandhi, and many more!

SAPIENS HUB is a collective of passionate individuals that love timeless wisdom compiled and compressed into insightful quotes. Our main goal is to infect you with motivation and inspiration to live life and engage with it at its fullest.

SAPIENS HUB brings you a compilation of the very best quotes from the world’s most iconic humans on “TRUTH”, including:

– Abraham Lincoln
– Albert Camus
– Aldous Huxley
– Aristotle
– Banksy
– Bertrand Russell
– C.G.Jung
– C.S.Lewis
– Carl Sagan
– Charles Bukowski
– Charlie Chaplin
– Eckhart Tolle
– Elvis Presley
– Ernest Hemingway
– Friedrich Nietzsche
– Fyodor Dostoyevsky
– Gabriel García Márquez
– Gautama Buddha
– George Carlin
– George Orwell
– George R.R. Martin
– Helen Keller
– Henry David Thoreau
– Isaac Newton
– J.K. Rowling
– Jack Kerouac
– Jiddu Krishnamurti
– Jim Morrison
– John Green
– John Lennon
– Lao Tzu
– Leo Tolstoy
– Mahatma Gandhi
– Malcolm X
– Marcus Aurelius
– Marilyn Monroe
– Mark Twain
– Maya Angelou
– Michael Jackson
– Noam Chomsky
– Oscar Wilde
– Pablo Picasso
– Pema Chödrön
– Ray Bradbury
– René Descartes
– Sigmund Freud
– Socrates
– Søren Kierkegaard
– Steve Jobs
– Suzanne Collins
– Voltaire
– William Blake
– William Shakespeare
– Winston S. Churchill

And many more!

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Hemingway Didn’t Say That: The Truth Behind Familiar Quotations

How one man corrected hundreds of modern misquotations infecting the Internet, our books, and our minds.

Everywhere you look, you’ll find viral quotable wisdom attributed to icons ranging from Abraham Lincoln to Mark Twain, from Cicero to Woody Allen. But more often than not, these attributions are false.

Garson O’Toole—the Internet’s foremost investigator into the dubious origins of our most repeated quotations, aphorisms, and everyday sayings—collects his efforts into a first-ever encyclopedia of corrective popular history. Containing an enormous amount of original research, this delightful compendium presents information previously unavailable to readers, writers, and scholars. It also serves as the first careful examination of what causes misquotations and how they spread across the globe.

Using the massive expansion in online databases as well as old-fashioned gumshoe archival digging, O’Toole provides a fascinating study of our modern abilities to find and correct misinformation. As Carl Sagan did not say, “Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known.”

Posted on 3 Comments

Hemingway Didn’t Say That: The Truth Behind Familiar Quotations

Everywhere you look, you’ll find viral quotable wisdom attributed to icons ranging from Abraham Lincoln to Mark Twain, from Cicero to Woody Allen. But more often than not, these attributions are false.

Garson O’Toole – the Internet’s foremost investigator into the dubious origins of our most repeated quotations, aphorisms, and everyday sayings – collects his efforts into a first-ever encyclopedia of corrective popular history. Containing an enormous amount of original research, this delightful compendium presents information previously unavailable to readers, writers, and scholars. It also serves as the first careful examination of what causes misquotations and how they spread across the globe.

Using the massive expansion in online databases as well as old-fashioned gumshoe archival digging, O’Toole provides a fascinating study of our modern abilities to find and correct misinformation. As Carl Sagan did not say, “Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known.”

Posted on 3 Comments

Hemingway Didn’t Say That: The Truth Behind Familiar Quotations

How one man corrected hundreds of modern misquotations infecting the Internet, our books, and our minds.

Everywhere you look, you’ll find viral quotable wisdom attributed to icons ranging from Abraham Lincoln to Mark Twain, from Cicero to Woody Allen. But more often than not, these attributions are false.

Garson O’Toole—the Internet’s foremost investigator into the dubious origins of our most repeated quotations, aphorisms, and everyday sayings—collects his efforts into a first-ever encyclopedia of corrective popular history. Containing an enormous amount of original research, this delightful compendium presents information previously unavailable to readers, writers, and scholars. It also serves as the first careful examination of what causes misquotations and how they spread across the globe.

Using the massive expansion in online databases as well as old-fashioned gumshoe archival digging, O’Toole provides a fascinating study of our modern abilities to find and correct misinformation. As Carl Sagan did not say, “Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known.”

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Ernest Hemingway: Quotes & Facts

This book is an anthology of 160 quotes from Ernest Hemingway and 70 selected by Blago Kirov facts about Ernest Hemingway. It grants Hemingway’s reflections on subjects ranging from the Old Man to the Sea; in addition, the book shows the personality of Ernest Hemingway into more human light:   Ernest Hemingway proposed the following epitaph for his tombstone: “Pardon me for not getting up.” Hemingway never wrote for the movies. Hemingway’s maternal grandparents were from England. Throughout his lifetime, Hemingway lived in Oak Park, Kansas City, Italy, Toronto, Chicago, Paris, Key West, Cuba, and Idaho. Hemingway often drank with James Joyce in Paris. In 1948, in Venice, Hemingway fell in love with the then 19-year-old Adriana Ivancich. The love affair inspired the novel Across the River and Into the Trees. Hemingway preferred to work standing up, spending hours and hours at a time on his feet, moving only to shift his weight from one leg to the other.     “A man can be destroyed but not defeated.” “Fish,” he said softly, aloud, “I’ll stay with you until I am dead.” “Fish,” he said, “I love you and respect you very much. But I will kill you dead before this day ends.” “Never sit a table when you can stand at the bar.” “Show the readers everything, tell them nothing.” “There is no friend as loyal as a book.” “There isn’t always an explanation for everything.” “Work every day. No matter what has happened the day or night before, get up and bite on the nail.”