Devora > Devora's Quotes

Showing 1-30 of 126
« previous 1 3 4 5
sort by

  • #1
    K.A. Riley
    “He pulls me close and kisses me. “For luck?” I ask. He shakes his head. “For love.”
    K.A. Riley, Synthesis

  • #2
    K.A. Riley
    “You’ll have a million obstacles in your path. Don’t be one of them.”
    K.A. Riley, Terminus

  • #3
    K.A. Riley
    “Extinction is the rule. Survival is the exception.” — Carl Sagan”
    K.A. Riley, Survival

  • #4
    K.A. Riley
    “We see it, believe in it, we’re force-fed it, and we call it the Truth.”
    K.A. Riley, Sacrifice

  • #5
    K.A. Riley
    “Knowledge. That’s the key to freedom.”
    K.A. Riley, Render

  • #6
    K.A. Riley
    “Step One: Dress your kid up in pink frilly bullshit. Tell her repeatedly that she needs to be rescued from a life of solitude by a rapey prince who will one day come along, plant a kiss on her lips and ensure that she never needs to lift a finger, read a book or expand her knowledge in any way. Check. Step Two: Grow up. Earn a very moderate education. Just enough to convince yourself that you’re properly liberated from the shackles of the Patriarchy. Check. Step Three: Meet a man who’s not quite Satan, but thinks he’s God. Check. Step Four: Marry him, thereby cementing his legal claim to your body and soul. Check. Step Five: Pop out a kid. Check. Step Six: Make banana bread at least once a week until bananas become contraband, while sporting a highly flammable apron that says, “Kiss the Cook” in big stupid red letters. Check.”
    K.A. Riley, Rise of the Inciters

  • #7
    K.A. Riley
    “The important thing is this: to be ready at any moment to sacrifice what you are for what you could become.” — Charles Dickens”
    K.A. Riley, Sacrifice

  • #8
    Kirsten Fullmer
    “Heidi's role as grand master was to monitor all the women and to manage their locations and communication. Even though she’d done this many times on multiple missions, her heartbeat still pounded in her ears.”
    Kirsten Fullmer, Trouble on Main Street

  • #9
    Kirsten Fullmer
    “From the antique Persian rugs covering the gleaming hardwood floors to the molded tin ceilings and ornate chandeliers, the house was a showstopper. Throughout its long life, no one had allowed this home to fall into disrepair. Every detail of the wainscoting, every pocket door, every window, floor tile, and bathtub was original to the house.”
    Kirsten Fullmer, Trouble on Main Street

  • #10
    Kirsten Fullmer
    “If Adam were honest with himself, which he rarely was, he’d come to terms with the fact that beyond his work and the view, he was floundering a bit. His plan had been to take the insurance money, leave his old life behind, and start completely over somewhere new. A place where memories didn’t lurk around every corner.
    He hadn’t figured on the memories coming along with him.”
    Kirsten Fullmer

  • #11
    Kirsten Fullmer
    “The poor man’s face twisted into a grimace and he pounded on the bar, protesting loudly. “Oh, you shush,” Kim demanded as she continued to knead his shoulders, jerking his whole body as she worked. “You’ll like this in a minute.”
    Kirsten Fullmer, Problems at the Pub

  • #12
    Kirsten Fullmer
    “The big question was, what all was this society up to? They’d certainly been in and out of his office, as well as accidently running into him all around town. Had he inadvertently missed what this group of ladies knew? And worse yet, had he given himself away?”
    Kirsten Fullmer, Problems at the Pub

  • #13
    Kirsten Fullmer
    “Where did you see him?” Heidi asked.
    “At the grocery store,” Mildred replied. “He was picking out a cantaloupe. Of course, I had to give him some tips. He was about to pick one that wasn’t anywhere near ripe.” The women tossed each other knowing looks.”
    Kirsten Fullmer, Problems at the Pub

  • #14
    Kirsten Fullmer
    “Monique bit at the side of lip. “He’s pretty active, I don’t want to impose…”
    Tony stood and scooped up the puppy. “No, seriously, I’d love a little company.”
    Kirsten Fullmer, Problems at the Pub

  • #15
    Kirsten Fullmer
    “Mildred adjusted the papers and scribbled some more. When she was finished, she took off her glasses, leaving them to swing from the chain around her neck. She gave the women around the table a pointed look. “Now think hard, ladies, can you come up with anything else?”
    Kirsten Fullmer

  • #16
    Kirsten Fullmer
    “She gripped the wheel and squared her shoulders. She didn’t have to do any of this alone. All she had to do was notify the society and put out an All Points Bulletin on Adam and she’d know everything there was to know about the man within 24 hours.”
    Kirsten Fullmer

  • #17
    Fiona Valpy
    “Life is not about waiting for the storm to pass, it’s about learning to dance in the rain.”
    Fiona Valpy, The Beekeeper's Promise

  • #18
    Fiona Valpy
    “So, is it wrong to dream, to want the things we don’t have?’ ‘No, my darling, never give up your dreams. But just make sure they don’t distract you too much from the good things that there are in your day-to-day life, even if that life is by no means perfect. Because there always are good things”
    Fiona Valpy, Sea of Memories

  • #19
    Fiona Valpy
    “Being mindful. Rather than having a mind that’s full,”
    Fiona Valpy, The Beekeeper's Promise

  • #20
    Fiona Valpy
    “you can’t always choose what life throws at you. But you always have a choice in how you deal with it.”
    Fiona Valpy, Sea of Memories

  • #21
    Fiona Valpy
    “You smell of honey and sunshine. Even after all that. The darkness of this world can't dim the light that shines from you, Eliane.”
    Fiona Valpy, The Beekeeper's Promise

  • #22
    Fiona Valpy
    “Go to your fields and your gardens, and you shall learn that it is the pleasure of the bee to gather honey of the flower, But it is also the pleasure of the flower to yield its honey to the bee. For to the bee a flower is a fountain of life, And to the flower a bee is a messenger of love.”
    Fiona Valpy, The Beekeeper's Promise

  • #23
    Fiona Valpy
    “So, if we cling on to life so hard and value it so much, how deep do depression and despair have to drag someone before they reach a place where they can’t bear to go on?”
    Fiona Valpy, The Dressmaker's Gift

  • #24
    Fiona Valpy
    “I think the biggest mistake I made was not to see that the imperfect reality was worth so much more than the perfect dream.”
    Fiona Valpy, Sea of Memories

  • #25
    Fiona Valpy
    “I see now that it’s one of the paradoxes of life that if we love it so much that we are frightened of losing it, it can make us live a half-life, too scared to get out there and live whole-heartedly because we have too much to lose. In the same way, I think I protect myself in relationships, too scared to love whole-heartedly because then there would be too much to lose there too.”
    Fiona Valpy, The Dressmaker's Gift

  • #26
    Fiona Valpy
    “But you see, Kendra dear, you have a choice. You can either let the pain overwhelm you, defining your life from that point on – perhaps even ending it or, at best, consigning you to a living death – or you can find a way to bear it, to carry it with you and still go on living. As you well know yourself, you can’t always choose what life throws at you. But you always have a choice in how you deal with it.”
    Fiona Valpy, Sea of Memories

  • #27
    Fiona Valpy
    “When that photograph was taken, those three young women – full of hopes and dreams – had their lives ahead of them. It seems to me that they epitomise a love for life. They weren’t to know, on that May morning, just how far that love was going to be tested. And then I think of my mother. How deep do depression and despair have to drag a person until, at last, they reach a place where they can’t bear to go on? Claire and Vivi showed how much the human spirit can endure: brutality, cruelty, inhumanity – all of these can be borne. It is the loss of those you love that is unbearable.”
    Fiona Valpy, The Dressmaker's Gift

  • #28
    Fiona Valpy
    “Do you wish you’d done anything differently?’ I ask. ‘Of course. With hindsight we always see things so much more clearly. But at the time we muddle through, trying to make the best decisions we can, but making all sorts of mistakes along the way. I think the biggest mistake I made was not realising that there are so many different kinds of love. And that there is room for them all. No one excludes the others.”
    Fiona Valpy, Sea of Memories

  • #29
    Fiona Valpy
    “And it dawns on me that perhaps there are very many different ways to keep someone alive in your heart.”
    Fiona Valpy, The Dressmaker's Gift

  • #30
    Fiona Valpy
    “I’ve read that the currents of trauma run deep in families. They can be inherited, passed down the generations from one to the next, ruining lives as they go. Perhaps that’s what happened to my mother. But I won’t let it happen to me. Now that I understand where that trauma came from, I can see it for what it is. And by finding the courage to turn and face it, I have the opportunity to stop it in its tracks.”
    Fiona Valpy, The Dressmaker's Gift



Rss
« previous 1 3 4 5