Come Home Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Come Home Come Home by Lisa Scottoline
21,575 ratings, 3.61 average rating, 2,207 reviews
Open Preview
Come Home Quotes Showing 1-13 of 13
“Moms never get out of the kid business. Last time I checked, motherhood had no expiration date.”
Lisa Scottoline, Come Home
“That’s what books do, isn’t it? That’s why I love to read. They bring us closer to ourselves.”
Lisa Scottoline, Come Home
“Motherhood was not for the weak.”
Lisa Scottoline, Come Home
“She’d believed in forever in her twenties, when Gray had said it, meaning every word, and she’d believed in forever in her thirties, when William had said it, lying through his teeth. But she’d lived long enough to know that forever couldn’t be guaranteed to anyone. Even tomorrow couldn’t be relied upon.”
Lisa Scottoline, Come Home
“nobody was ever replaced in life, no hole completely filled or loss totally healed. You didn’t need a medical degree to know that the human body really wasn’t stronger in the broken places. Like any bone, the cracks would always show if you looked hard enough.”
Lisa Scottoline, Come Home
“She had lived long enough to learn that families didn’t dissolve or reconfigure neatly, but left debris lying everywhere, and it was human debris. And sometimes, like tonight, she felt as if she were tripping over the bodies.”
Lisa Scottoline, Come Home
“money”
Lisa Scottoline, Come Home
“rain obliterated the outlines of the houses”
Lisa Scottoline, Come Home
“Katie had said that motherhood had no expiration date, and Jill had agreed, believing to the bone that that it transcended everything—biology, law, even time and space.”
Lisa Scottoline, Come Home
“Just choose the people you love wisely. They have to deserve you.”
Lisa Scottoline, Come Home
“she knew from her practice that kids who felt terrible about their parents somehow ended up feeling terrible about themselves.”
Lisa Scottoline, Come Home
“want to take a special moment to thank my editor, Jennifer Enderlin, to whom this book is dedicated. I came to Jen when my writing life was well-established and my habits somewhat entrenched (if not ossified). But getting to know her, to listen to her suggestions, and to watch her approach to my work has opened my eyes, and heart, in so many ways. A great editor has the talent and power to bring out the best in a writer, and I feel Jen doing that for me, encouraging me to go deeper, and truer, with each book and even each sentence. Jen, I can’t thank you enough, and this dedication is only a start. Thanks and big love to my incredible”
Lisa Scottoline, Come Home
“But whose mother are you? Don’t slip so easily into the role of being that kid’s mother.” “I used to be.” “But you’re not, anymore.” “Really?” Jill’s chest tightened. “What’s a mother, or a stepmother? What’s a family? Isn’t it forever? The love doesn’t stop when the legal relationship does.” “No, but the obligation does. The responsibility does.” Jill tried a different tack. “Okay, think about it this way. Your son Steven is going to be my stepson, after we get married. I love him, and he’s a great young man. Let’s imagine that, God forbid, something happens to you, and I remarry, and your son Steven gets into trouble. Medical, legal, whatever. Do I turn my back on him because my new husband says so?” “Steven’s thirty years old, busy as hell, down in Texas. He doesn’t need us anymore, he barely even visits.” “But he could need us, or me.” “Then you can’t be there for him, not forever and ever.” “Love isn’t finite, Sam.” “No, but time is. Money is. Resources are. Energy is.” “I know, but is that the world you want to live in?” Jill thought he was missing the point. “Wouldn’t you want me to take care of Steven?” “No, I still come down the same way.” Sam’s lips flattened to a firm line. “I’d understand it if your husband felt the way I do, which is that I didn’t sign on for this. I love you and I love Megan, but I don’t love your troubled ex-stepdaughter, and I don’t want another kid. I’m getting out of the kid business.”
Lisa Scottoline, Come Home