Enchanted to Meet You Quotes

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Enchanted to Meet You (Witches of West Harbor, #1) Enchanted to Meet You by Meg Cabot
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“people are always trying to brush off the things that women love, like fashion and makeup, as superficial or frivolous. But they’re not, because for some people, those things are armor they put on to feel more confident in a world that can sometimes feel cruel. They’re transformative and empowering.”
Meg Cabot, Enchanted to Meet You
“She reached out to lay a finger on his chest. Just one fingertip, on the bare patch of skin that showed though the V of his shirt. It felt like... Home.”
Meg Cabot, Enchanted to Meet You
“I didn't care. I didn't care because I was the Chosen One. Chosen by him.”
Meg Cabot, Enchanted to Meet You
“You know I love you, don't you? You're the only thing my heart beats for”
Meg Cabot, Enchanted to Meet You
“Thank you" she said, in a voice so quiet he wouldn't have heard her if his very being hadn't become attuned, over the past few days, to her every word, her every movement, her every breath”
Meg Cabot, Enchanted to Meet You
“So glad I could be there to rescue you when the rift beneath your town tore open and unleashed meteorological death upon you. Does this kind of thing happen often around here? Because weirdly, they didn't mention it on TripAdvisor”
Meg Cabot, Enchanted to Meet You
“If I'd had to have sex with him - in order to save my town - it would not have been the worst thing imaginable”
Meg Cabot, Enchanted to Meet You
“Not what" he said. "Who. Jessica Gold, you're the Chosen One”
Meg Cabot, Enchanted to Meet You
“The French might be known for their cooking, but do you know what else they’re really good at? That’s right: sex. But with all my experience, I’d never met a guy who was as good with his hands as Derrick.”
Meg Cabot, Enchanted to Meet You
“Of course a guy started it. In ancient times, it was usually women who practiced the art of healing. Every society had goddesses to whom they prayed for health, who helped supply the herbs they needed to cure what ailed them, and midwives and priestesses to apply them. It was men who began accusing these women of being witches, and the medicine they used magic, because they were fearful of losing their power and status in society. So they had them killed. Because men are and always have been jealous of women’s power, especially our innate psychic power, and always attempt to co-opt it whenever—”
Meg Cabot, Enchanted to Meet You