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“I'm saying it's totally oblivious to how people feel. Take the ocean, for instance. You can love it, but it doesn't love you back. It will suck you under and steal your breath and beauty can make you cry, or that the sound of the tide coming in at night is the best lullaby you ever heard.”
D. Anne Love, Defying the Diva

Jodi Picoult
“There is no set of rules that dictates what you owe someone you love. What parts of your past should be disclosed? Should you confess you are trans? Alcoholic? That you had a same-sex relationship? An abortion? That you were abused by the person you trusted most in the world? When, if ever, is the right time for that conversation: before your first date, before your first kiss, before you sleep together? Where is the line between keeping something private, and being dishonest? What if the worst happens? What if honesty is the thing that breaks you apart? “What’s her name?” Asher asks, drawing me out of my reverie. I cover the new hive. I’ve been thinking of Billie Eilish, but maybe not every queen needs to be a pop diva. “Lily?” I suggest. I sit down next to him in the field, as stragglers from the crate fly to the entrance of the hive. We watch the sun go down,”
Jodi Picoult, Mad Honey

Jimmy Carr
“Be nice because it’s the right thing to do, it’s the best way to act in the world and it is what good human beings do. Being difficult and diva-ish or petulant just makes you hard to deal with, it doesn’t make you more authentic or creative or real.”
Jimmy Carr, Before & Laughter: A Life Changing Book

Maurene Goo
“I took a moment’s pleasure in it as I waved down the server for our check. I looked at Jack with a lazy, all-too-comfortable speed. “You can pay, right? I don’t have my wallet. S-o-o-orry.” How great did it feel to be that girl? The bratty, spoiled first date getting her way? I never, ever, ever got to behave this way. Being a diva was not a part I was allowed to play.”
Maurene Goo, Somewhere Only We Know

“I don’t care what they say about Aretha,” said Billy Preston. “She can be hiding out in her house in Detroit for years. She can go decades without taking a plane or flying off to Europe. She can cancel half her gigs and infuriate every producer and promoter in the country. She can sing all kinds of jive-ass songs that are beneath her. She can go into her diva act and turn off the world. But on any given night, when that lady sits down at the piano and gets her body and soul all over some righteous song, she’ll scare the shit out of you. And you’ll know—you’ll swear—that she’s still the best fuckin’ singer this fucked-up country has ever produced.”
David Ritz, Respect: The Life of Aretha Franklin

Cassandra Clare
“Simon, is your diva moment over? I need to talk to Jace.”
Cassandra Clare, City of Glass

Patricia V. Davis
“I can be totally feminine and totally feminist. The two are not mutually exclusive.”
Patricia V. Davis, The Diva Doctrine: 16 Universal Principles Every Woman Needs to Know

Sarah Mayberry
“(Sadie)"I'm not judging you, Dylan. I love vampire movies. If I looked surprised it was only because it's so different from your TV work, that's all."
His shoulders relaxed a notch. "Sorry. Olly gives me a lot of shit for selling out. He doesn't get that no one is ever going to make his movie about two old men on a fishing trip. Or, even if they do, no one is every going to go see it.”
Sarah Mayberry, Take on Me

Sophia Kapp
“Iewers in jou vriendekring gaan daar ’n welmenende idioot wees wat op jou broosste oomblik vir jou vertel dat iemand anders se hartseer meer meriete het as joune. Asof smart ’n kompetisie is waarin net die wenner die reg het om te rou.”
Sophia Kapp, Oorlewingsgids vir 'n Bedonnerde Diva

Sophia Kapp
“Jy hoef niks te vra nie, jy moet luister. Dis ’n vaardigheid wat baie min mense deesdae het. En dit is, ironies genoeg, die ding wat ons die graagste wil hê. Vriende is eintlik maar net gewone mense wat luister.”
Sophia Kapp, Oorlewingsgids vir 'n Bedonnerde Diva

Mark Schweizer
“Father Tony had banished the dreaded “children’s moment” soon after he’d returned to taking charge of the services. Now”
Mark Schweizer, The Diva Wore Diamonds

Jo Raven
“What do you know, my daughter is a goddamn diva.”
Jo Raven, Caveman

“When you have a difficult employee who is challenging you, learn to relish this as an opportunity to grow others and yourself in the process. 5.”
Alan Willett, Leading the Unleadable: How to Manage Mavericks, Cynics, Divas, and Other Difficult People

“To be able to best manage the mavericks, cynics, divas, and other difficult people and situations, we have to first change our frames of reference in how we think about them. This”
Alan Willett, Leading the Unleadable: How to Manage Mavericks, Cynics, Divas, and Other Difficult People

Michelle Visage
“IF YOU EVER FEEL YOURSELF GIVING IN TO YOUR INNER EVIL TWIN, KNOW THIS: In every battle, from lip-syncing to real life, presence always trumps perfection. Confidence trumps competence, so wear it like an accessory.”
Michelle Visage, The Diva Rules

Michael  Wolff
“Finally, it was the right-wing diva and Trump supporter Ann Coulter who took the president-elect aside and said, “Nobody is apparently telling you this. But you can’t. You just can’t hire your children.”
Michael Wolff, Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House

Monica Millner
“Unleash your kinky hair, Diva.”
Monica Millner

Vyankatesh Madgulkar
“शिंगाला शिंग भिडवून रेटारेटी सुरू होते; पण हे भांडण नसतं. तू मोठा की मी मोठा ठरवण्यासाठी हे ताकदीचं प्रदर्शन असतं. यात उजवा ठरेल, तो विजेता! लगेच त्याचं वडीलपण मान्य करून दुसरा प्रतिस्पर्धी माघार घेतो. पुन्हा गुण्यागोविंदानं दोघं चरू लागतात. अशी रेटारेटी होऊन नंबर ठरतात. एक, दोन, तीन, चार. मोठ्या बापाचा म्हणून कोणी मोठा मानला जात नाही. कळपात राहून आपण नंबर ठरवून घ्यावा लागतो.”
Vyankatesh Madgulkar, Jangalatil Divas

“Women can be narcissistic too, but they tend to express these traits mostly within the domains of personal appearance or vanity, the status of their children or household, and their value as caregivers. In addition, narcissistic women are inclined toward more covert manifestations of this syndrome. They are likely to show up as martyrs, whiners, and gratuitous victims. Of course, you will also meet grand dames and divas, who look more like their male counterparts in their aggressive quest for attention and admiration.”
Wendy T. Behary, Disarming the Narcissist: Surviving and Thriving with the Self-Absorbed

Michelle Zauner
“My mother never seemed to listen to much music, but she loved Barbara Streisand, counting The Way We Were and Yentl as two of her favorite films. I remembered how we used to sing the song "Tell Him" together, and skipped through the album until I found it on track four.
"Remember this?"
I laughed, turning up the volume. It's a duet between Babe and Celine Dion, two powerhouse divas joining together for one epic track. Celine plays the role of a young woman afraid to confess her feelings to the man she loves, and Barbara is her confidant, encouraging her to take the plunge.
"I'm scared, so afraid to show I care... Will he think me weak, if I tremble when I speak?" Celine begins.
When I was a kid my mother used to quiver her lower lip for dramatic effect when she sang the word "tremble." We would trade verses in the living room. I was Barbara and she was Celine, the two of us adding interpretive dance and yearning facial expressions to really sell it.
"I've been there, with my heart out in my hand..." I'd join in, a trail of chimes punctuating my entrance. "But what you must understand, you can't let the chance to love him pass you by!" I'd exclaim, prancing from side to side, raising my hand to urge my voice upward, showcasing my exaggerated vocal range.
Then, together, we'd join in triumphantly. "Tell him! Tell him that the sun and moon rise in his eyes! Reach out to him!" And we'd ballroom dance in a circle along the carpet, staring into each other's eyes as we crooned along to the chorus.
My mom let out a soft giggle from the passenger seat and we sang quietly the rest of the way home. Driving out past the clearing just as the sun went down, the scalloped clouds flushed with a deep orange that made it look like magma.”
Michelle Zauner, Crying in H Mart