1.
We establish a connection with the unknown through the act of giving something and, paradoxically, the act of destroying something. That is what is behind sacrifice. What you offer and what you destroy, it is that surplus which is life itself.
Roberto Calasso
2.
Education is paradoxical in that it is largely composed of things that cannot be learned
Roberto Calasso
3.
The monster does not need the hero. it is the hero who needs him for his very existence. When the hero confronts the monster, he has yet neither power nor knowledge, the monster is his secret father who will invest him with a power and knowledge that can belong to one man only, and that only the monster can give.
Roberto Calasso
4.
The gods are fugitive guests of literature.
Roberto Calasso
5.
Myth is never a single story. It is always a tree with many branches.
Roberto Calasso
6.
Whatever else it might be, the divine is certainly the thing that imposes with maximum intensity the sensation of being alive.
Roberto Calasso
7.
Stories never live alone; They are the branches of a family that we have to trace back, and forward.
Roberto Calasso
8.
Wendy Doniger has spent decades collecting not only myths from ancient texts but stories of all kinds from novels, movies, newspapers about an old mystery: what has or hasn't happened in bed for centuries. Rich in insights about sex, lies, and personal identity, the result is entertaining, enthralling, and, yes, sexy.
Roberto Calasso
9.
The author is the successor of the saint, everyone respects the author.
Roberto Calasso