Carrie > Carrie's Quotes

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  • #1
    Randy Pausch
    “Time is all you have and you may find one day that you have less than you think.”
    Randy Pausch, The Last Lecture

  • #2
    Jean Cocteau
    “I love cats because I enjoy my home; and little by little, they become its visible soul.”
    Jean Cocteau

  • #3
    Alan Bradley
    “As I stood outside in Cow Lane, it occurred to me that Heaven must be a place where the library is open twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.

    No ... eight days a week.”
    Alan Bradley, The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie

  • #4
    Margaret Mitchell
    “Child, it's a very bad thing for a woman to face the worst that can happen to her, because after she's faced the worst she can't ever really fear anything again. ...Scarlett, always save something to fear— even as you save something to love...”
    Margaret Mitchell, Gone with the Wind

  • #5
    Margaret Mitchell
    “Scarlett, always save something to fear—even as you save something to love.”
    Margaret Mitchell, Gone with the Wind

  • #6
    Margaret Mitchell
    “Life's under no obligation to give us what we expect.”
    Margaret Mitchell

  • #7
    Betty  Smith
    “The library was a little old shabby place. Francie thought it was beautiful. The feeling she had about it was as good as the feeling she had about church. She pushed open the door and went in. She liked the combined smell of worn leather bindings, library past and freshly inked stamping pads better than she liked the smell of burning incense at high mass.”
    Betty Smith, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn

  • #8
    Kathryn Stockett
    “All I'm saying is, kindness don't have no boundaries.”
    Kathryn Stockett, The Help

  • #9
    Kathryn Stockett
    “I always order the banned books from a black market dealer in California, figuring if the State of Mississippi banned them, they must be good.”
    Kathryn Stockett, The Help

  • #10
    Kathryn Stockett
    “....I realized I actually had a choice in what I could believe.”
    Kathryn Stockett

  • #11
    Sarah Addison Allen
    “Sometimes its necessary to embrace the magic, to find out what's real in life, and in one's own heart.”
    Sarah Addison Allen, First Frost

  • #12
    “in a letter to the New York Times, Dr. Hans Neumann from the New Haven Department of Health noted that based on the projected scale of the immunizations, within two days of getting a flu shot, about 2,300 people would have a stroke and 7,000 would have a heart attack. “Why?” he asked. “Because that is the number statistically expected, flu shots or no flu shots.” Likewise, in the week following a flu vaccine, another 9,000 people would contract pneumonia, of whom 900 would die. These would certainly occur after a flu shot, but not as a consequence of it. “Yet,” wrote Neumann, “can one expect a person who received a flu shot at noon and who that same night had a stroke not to associate somehow the two in his mind?” Grandma got the flu vaccine in the morning, and she was dead in the afternoon. Although association does not equal causation, this thinking could lead to a public backlash against vaccinations that would threaten future programs.”
    Jeremy Brown, Influenza: The Hundred-Year Hunt to Cure the 1918 Spanish Flu Pandemic

  • #13
    Nghi Vo
    “My eyes are open for always, my mouth is empty for always, and always will my soul reach for yours. In the land of the dead, there are only blackbirds, and I send this one to you, in the hopes that you remember me still. Light me a stick of incense, and so long as it burns, let me sit in the chamber outside your bedroom again. Until it goes out...Let me stay and be for you.”
    Nghi Vo, When the Tiger Came Down the Mountain

  • #14
    Michael Cisco
    “There are problems we solve and problems we live with, and when we see people who have learned to live with terrible problems, the ordinary way they have about them makes it easy for us to forget, or never to notice, the merciless persistence of the problem, the way its agony has made itself into the root and stone of an ordinary life. We want to think that adaptation is a cure, when in reality it isn’t even a palliative; it’s usually nothing more or less than the difference between death and being able to live in pain.”
    Michael Cisco



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