Jon Downes The Squatter Quotes

Quotes tagged as "jon-downes-the-squatter" Showing 1-21 of 21
Jonathan  Dunne
“The old farmhouse itself won’t cost you a penny, my dear. But it does come with a price.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“You see, Richard, I’ve been sort of living with the afterlife for the last few years. A chunk of me broke off and died with my son and husband that night. Ever since the car accident I feel dislocated, dislodged, unhinged, undone, constant déjà vu. Sometimes I hear an echo where I shouldn’t.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“When we are young, we don’t realise we are young. When we are old we do realise we are old. True freedom we had as children only exists in memory.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“There is nothing in life or the afterlife that can scare me now.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“An old building becomes a character by absorbing the energy of those who once lived in it and called it home.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“...that reassuringly cosy child’s night light that staved off all night terrors…all night terrors except the real ones.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“Children become someone else when they talk in their sleep; possessed and speaking the absurd gibberish dialect of Sleeplandia.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“In time, the cockatoo would become the Greene’s canary in a coal mine.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“Everyone loves a good ghost story because it’s just a story.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“You’re going to be the voice of the voiceless.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“Molly had experienced death in life and now she was experiencing life in death. Somewhere along the way, the two had become confused and fused. In a nightmarish, endearing way, Molly Greene was coming full circle.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“Molly gasped for air, never felt more alive now that she was dying…”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“Molly Greene had been through far too much in this life to be intimidated by anyone from the afterlife.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“Standing in the back yard, under the glow of the porch light with the fluttering moths, stood a wiry ancient woman, dressed in grieving black from head to toe. She stood solemnly in Molly’s back yard, as if by a graveside, and in many ways, the farmhouse was. In her arthritic vulture clutches, the woman held rosary beads. One by one, she counted the beads through gnarled fingers while mechanically muttering an Our Father.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“If ever the witch in the Hansel and Gretel existed, then Molly was looking at her tonight…and her house made of sweets and cakes was not too far away in the forest. And in that house of goodies was a Nazi oven.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“There’s no such thing as trespassing where evil spirits walk — there are no boundaries. I’m here to bless the fledglings of the house. Children’s laughter is sweetest at night,’ the creepy vision crooned. ‘You’re playing with your children’s lives. Wasn’t one enough?”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“But now she crumbled as something swam up from the deep well of pain and murky sorrow, where all her bottled tears had lain stagnant, and bit her with its needle teeth.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“They say truth can be a bitter pill to swallow, but lies can be even more of a bitter pill and will fester in the belly. Molly wailed, bringing herself to the point of gagging and vomiting, as she flushed the demons from her system, these fiendish angels which had haunted her more than anything this possessed house could ever raise. She’d never spoken about why Mike and Henry had been taken in the accident; her girls never knew it should’ve been their own mother on the road that night, but she’d been all liquored up at a silly work party, and she was taking that to her grave — where she should be right now.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“The farmhouse would be their victory; a broken house for a broken family.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“It was starting to look like the Greene clan had a bright future. The trick was to not look too far into that future.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel

Jonathan  Dunne
“In her pursuit of the afterlife, she’d overlooked life.”
Jon Downes, The Squatter: An Old Castle Novel