Rose Lerner > Rose's Quotes

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  • #1
    Georgette Heyer
    “I comfort myself with the reflection that your wife will possibly be able to curb your desire--I admit, a natural one for the most part--to exterminate your fellows.”
    Georgette Heyer, Devil's Cub

  • #2
    Walter  Scott
    “Many a law, many a commandment have I broken, but my word never.”
    Walter Scott

  • #3
    John Donne
    “Love's mysteries in souls do grow,
    But yet the body is his book.”
    John Donne, The Complete English Poems

  • #4
    Dorothy L. Sayers
    “She suddenly saw Wimsey in a new light. She knew him to be intelligent, clean, courteous, wealthy, well-read, amusing and enamored, but he had not so far produced in her that crushing sense of inferiority which leads to prostration and hero-worship. But she now realized that there was, after all, something godlike about him. He could control a horse.”
    Dorothy L. Sayers, Have His Carcase

  • #5
    Terry Pratchett
    “He had never been interested in stories at any age, and had never quite understood the basic concept. He'd never read a work of fiction all the way through. He did remember, as a small boy, being really annoyed at the depiction of Hickory Dickory Dock in a rag book of nursery rhymes because the clock in the drawing was completely wrong for the period.”
    Terry Pratchett, Thief of Time

  • #6
    “We may exhort ourselves to read tolerantly, we may quote Coleridge on the willing suspension of disbelief until we think ourselves totally suspended in a relativistic universe, and still we will find many books which postulate readers we refuse to become, books that depend on 'beliefs' or 'attitudes'...which we cannot adopt even hypothetically as our own.”
    Wayne Booth

  • #7
    “His lordship and I are...opposite sides of very different coins.”
    Emma Jensen, The Irish Rogue

  • #8
    “It is problematic because, taken together, the whole--composed of lies and truth--forms a truth of its own.”
    Robin Feuer Miller

  • #9
    Nikos Kazantzakis
    “When an almond tree became covered with blossoms in the heart of winter, all the trees around it began to jeer. 'What vanity,' they screamed, 'what insolence! Just think, it believes it can bring spring in this way!' The flowers of the almond tree blushed for shame. 'Forgive me, my sisters,' said the tree. 'I swear I did not want to blossom, but suddenly I felt a warm springtime breeze in my heart.”
    Nikos Kazantzakis, Saint Francis

  • #10
    Louise Rennison
    “Here is another marvy glimpse into the gothic basement that I call my mind.”
    Louise Rennison, Away Laughing on a Fast Camel
    tags: humor

  • #11
    Oscar Wilde
    “You silly Arthur! If you knew anything about...anything, which you don't, you would know that I adore you. Everyone in London knows it except you. It is a public scandal the way I adore you. I have been going about for the last six months telling the whole of society that I adore you. I wonder you consent to have anything to say to me. I have no character left at all. At least, I feel so happy that I am quite sure I have no character left at all.”
    Oscar Wilde, An Ideal Husband

  • #12
    Louise Fitzhugh
    “YOU CAN'T BE TOO OLD TO SPY EXCEPT IF YOU WERE FIFTY YOU MIGHT FALL OFF A FIRE ESCAPE, BUT YOU COULD SPY AROUND ON THE GROUND A LOT.”
    Louise Fitzhugh, Harriet the Spy

  • #13
    “If the mystery can be reduced to one solution, it lies in a simple coincidence: Rimbaud's interest in his own work had survived the realization that the world would not be changed by verbal innovation. It did not survive the failure of all his adult relationships. He had always treated poems as a form of private communication. He gave his songs to chansonniers, his satires to satirists. Without a constant companion, he was writing in a void.”
    Graham Robb, Rimbaud: A Biography

  • #14
    Lemony Snicket
    “For some stories, it's easy. The moral of 'The Three Bears,' for instance, is "Never break into someone else's house.' The moral of 'Snow White' is 'Never eat apples.' The moral of World War I is 'Never assassinate Archduke Ferdinand.”
    Lemony Snicket, The Wide Window

  • #15
    Neil Gaiman
    “Picking five favorite books is like picking the five body parts you'd most like not to lose.”
    Neil Gaiman

  • #16
    Leonard Cohen
    “My reputation as a ladies' man was a joke that caused me to laugh bitterly through the ten thousand nights I spent alone.”
    Leonard Cohen

  • #17
    Jasper Fforde
    “DCI Horner's advice to Jack Spratt: "Remember, m'boy," his old boss had said, eyes twinkling, "that if anyone tries to get the better of you, stand up straight and say to yourself in an imperious air, 'I am the new Mrs. de Winter now!' You'll find it works wonders.”
    Jasper Fforde
    tags: humor



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