The God of the Woods Quotes

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The God of the Woods The God of the Woods by Liz Moore
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The God of the Woods Quotes Showing 1-30 of 207
“Rich people, thought Judy—she thought this then, and she thinks it now—generally become most enraged when they sense they’re about to be held accountable for their wrongs.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“It was funny, she thought, how many relationships one could have with the same man, over the course of a lifetime together.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“For knowing too much, rather than too little. For a woman, neither was an acceptable way to be.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“We can do as we please, if we only learn not to care so much about what people think.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“the quickest way to make an attractive man ugly was to give him too much to drink.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“Kissing someone - someone you want to kiss, I mean - is like living inside the best song you ever heard. It's the same feeling.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“Panic,' said T.J. But no one raised a hand.

She explained. It came from the Greek god Pan: the god of the woods. He liked to trick people, to confuse and disorient them until they lost their bearings, and their minds.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“It was wonderful, thought Tracy, having friends like these, who seemed to see the parts of yourself you worked hardest to hide, and bring them into the light and celebrate them with a sort of tender ribbing that uplifted more than it put down.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“How many times in her life has she said yes to a boy or a man just because it was the easiest thing to do? How many times has she let a man take what he wanted, instead of taking something for herself?”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“Being humorless, she thought, was even worse than being dumb.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“Do you ever worry that being born into money has stunted us?” Alice blanched. “I don’t mean anything by it,” said Delphine. “It’s just—lately I’ve been wondering whether having all of our material needs met from birth has been a positive aspect of our lives. It seems to me it may have resulted in some absence of yearning or striving in us. The quest, I like to call it. When one’s parents or grandparents have already quested and conquered, what is there for subsequent generations to do?”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“Her voice, it seemed, had been continuously decrescendoing since birth, so that by age twelve, she could scarcely be heard.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“This is one of the few sheer pleasures Louise knows in life: the near-otherworldly feeling of touching another human's body with your own body in a way that, for the first time, transcends mere friendliness. These are the times in her life that Louise has felt most acutely the animal nature of her humanity, and therefore they have been the most comforting. To be a human is complex, and often painful; to be an animal is comfortingly simple and good.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“To be a human is complex, and often painful; to be an animal is comfortingly simple and good.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“Usually, she was gifted in the art of shutting up. Not today.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“For a bonus, she asked them: Who knew the origins of the word? “Which word?” someone said. “Panic,” said T.J. But no one raised a hand. She explained. It came from the Greek god Pan: the god of the woods. He liked to trick people, to confuse and disorient them until they lost their bearings, and their minds. To panic, said T.J., was to make an enemy of the forest. To stay calm was to be its friend.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“If she believed in a God, it was in one who functioned something like Louise in this moment: rooting for her charges from afar, mourning alongside them when they were rejected, celebrating every small victory that came their way. She noticed the lonely ones, the ones at the edge of the crowd; she felt in her heart a sort of wild affection for them, wanted to go to them, to stand next to them and pull them tightly to her side; and yet she also knew that to intervene in this way would disrupt something sacred that—at twelve and thirteen and fourteen years old—they were learning about themselves and the world. And this, too, was how she thought of God.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“ever notice how the children of rich people are never as smart as the parents? Never as ambitious, never as successful? You gotta have something to strive for in life.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“Listen,” said Delphine. “The best part of being married to George Barlow for a decade was learning that it’s all right not to do everything that’s expected of you all of the time. This is a notion that has been positively liberating for me. The way we were raised—the way our parents raised us, I mean—it trained us to think it’s our job to be absolutely correct in everything that we do. But it isn’t, Bunny. Do you see? We can have our own thoughts, our own inner lives. We can do as we please, if we only learn not to care so much about what people think.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“It's the Van Laars, and families like them, who have always depended on others.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“To panic, said T.J., was to make an enemy of the forest. To stay calm was to be its friend.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“But nobody asked her, and so she kept these wishes quiet, writing them only in journals, summoning them to the forefront of her mind whenever a birthday or a well or a star presented her with a formal opportunity to make them known to the universe.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“But the quickest way to make an attractive man ugly was to give him too much to drink.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“Her father once told her casually that she was built like a plum on toothpicks, and the phrase was at once so cruel and so poetic that it clicked into place around her like a harness. • • •”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“What she thought about most in the world in those days was Bear, and her all-consuming love for him. She sometimes felt that becoming a parent had revealed to her the existence of another dimension or another sense.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“She read Walden out of sheer boredom and found herself annoyed by Thoreau: his self-regard, his tone of superiority, the way he doled out advice so obvious as to be insulting. Here was a rich person playing, thought Louise. There were poor people far more resourceful and self-sufficient than he was; they just had the grace and self-awareness not to brag about it.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“But the quickest way to make an attractive man ugly was to give him too much to drink. Drunk men frightened her. She had learned young how to coddle them, how to laugh just enough at their bad jokes to prevent them from feeling insulted, but not so much that her laughter egged them on. Coiled just below a surface of good humor lay their strength and their meanness, two guns waiting to go off.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“There was a particular brand of humor employed by twelve- and thirteen-year-old girls, especially when they weren’t in the presence of boys: it was at once disgusting and innocent, bawdy and naive. When it wasn’t being used for ill—when no one was its target—this type of humor delighted Louise. From the wall, she watched them quietly, fondly, recalling what it was like to be in this moment of life that was like a breath before speech, a last sweet pause before some great unveiling.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“How quickly, I reflected, peril could be followed by beauty in the wilderness, each forming a part of the other. —From Woodswoman by Anne LaBastille”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods
“Later on, the ten seconds that pass between sight and inference will serve to her as evidence that time is a human construct, that it can slow or accelerate in the presence of emotion, of chemicals in the blood.”
Liz Moore, The God of the Woods

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