Candra Bala > Candra's Quotes

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  • #1
    Frank  Lambert
    “The doorways into hell are mostly inside the mind.”
    Frank Lambert, Xyz

  • #2
    Barbara Sontheimer
    “Looking over the Ethan's bowed head, amidst the tangled forest of Wilderness littered with the bodies of men dead and dying, Victor saw the serene image of his mother.  She smiled at her son, her unbound black hair blowing wildly in the breeze.  She reached a hand out towards him, and this time, he went with her.”
    Barbara Sontheimer, Victor's Blessing

  • #3
    Nancy Omeara
    “Written twenty years after she held office, this abridged biography is being released now, prior to taking place.

    Maybe we can learn from history before it happens.”
    Nancy Omeara, The Most Popular President Who Ever Lived [So Far]

  • #4
    Sara Pascoe
    “The sunset bled into the edges of the village. Smoke curled out of the cottage chimney like a crooked finger.”
    Sara Pascoe, Being a Witch, and Other Things I Didn't Ask For

  • #5
    Andri E. Elia
    “He shredded my wings with his words.”
    Andri E. Elia, Borealis: A Worldmaker of Yand Novel

  • #6
    “I don't want to be caught with my pants down.”
    March Lions, The Last Sunset

  • #7
    Max Nowaz
    “Where’s my uncle?” she asked.
    “I don’t know who your uncle is, but if it as the guy who owned this place before I bought it, then he’s pushing up daisies.”
    “But it can’t be, he’s still young.”
    Max Nowaz, The Three Witches and the Master

  • #8
    Wally Lamb
    “He reached over and tweaked one of my bumps, then cuffed me on the chin. “You hiding walnuts in there or something?” “Shut up,” I said. I jumped in and swam the length of the pool, hiding my smile underwater. He was a flirt, that was all. What was wrong with that? If Mrs. Masicotte was stupid enough to buy us a pool because he flirted a little, that was her problem, not ours.”
    Wally Lamb, She's Come Undone

  • #9
    Kate DiCamillo
    “Desperaux," she said. He saw his name on her lips.
    "I honor you," whispered Desperaux. "I honor you.”
    Kate DiCamillo, The Tale of Despereaux
    tags: honor

  • #10
    Leo Tolstoy
    “In the name of God, stop a moment, cease your work, look around you.”
    Leo Tolstoy

  • #11
    Daniel Keyes
    “Whatever happens to me, I will have lived a thousand normal lives by what I might add to others not yet born.
    That's enough.”
    daniel keyes, Flowers for Algernon

  • #12
    Erik Larson
    “Holmes was charming and gracious, but something about him made Belknap uneasy. He could not have defined it. Indeed, for the next several decades alienists and their successors would find themselves hard-pressed to describe with any precision what it was about men like Holmes that could cause them to seem warm and ingratiating but also telegraph the vague sense that some important element of humanness was missing. At first alienists described this condition as “moral insanity” and those who exhibited the disorder as “moral imbeciles.” They later adopted the term “psychopath,” used in the lay press as early as 1885 in William Stead’s Pall Mall Gazette, which described it as a “new malady” and stated, “Beside his own person and his own interests, nothing is sacred to the psychopath.” Half a century later, in his path-breaking book The Mask of Sanity, Dr. Hervey Cleckley described the prototypical psychopath as “a subtly constructed reflex machine which can mimic the human personality perfectly. … So perfect is his reproduction of a whole and normal man that no one who examines him in a clinical setting can point out in scientific or objective terms why, or how, he is not real.”
    Erik Larson, The Devil in the White City

  • #13
    Neil Gaiman
    “I don't want whatever I want. Nobody does. Not really. What kind of fun would it be if I just got everything I ever wanted just like that, and it didn't mean anything? What then?”
    Neil Gaiman, Coraline



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