Cold Storage Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Cold Storage (The Revival Series, #2) Cold Storage by Michael C. Grumley
1,526 ratings, 4.36 average rating, 116 reviews
Open Preview
Cold Storage Quotes Showing 1-5 of 5
“Nick shook his head. “Corruption is everywhere. Even in our day-to-day lives, in small bits. And truth be told, there’s a fine line between corruption and plain old human nature. And self-interest ain’t always a bad thing. No, what I’m talking about is getting a look at the vastness of it all. What’s really happening behind those curtains. The sheer scale of it all.” Rachel”
Michael C. Grumley, Cold Storage
“So you’re anti-government?” she asked. “Not at all. Government, at least minimally so, is necessary for any well-functioning society. But I am anti-corruption. And pro-freedom,” he added with another wink.”
Michael C. Grumley, Cold Storage
“When modern society imploded under the weight of reckless unsustainability”
Michael C. Grumley, Cold Storage
“From several thousand feet up, the sprawling city of Provo appeared small and abstract. Discernible yet inconsequential. A feeling Kincaid knew well from the prism of wealth. A prism in which the wealthy viewed the world. How they saw the masses and the classes. What many of them privately referred to as the sheep. The simple, the unintelligent, and the unambitious. Impressionable people living the same life day after day, content in trudging through existence with only the aspirations given to them by media and society. Content in accepting the mundane as meaningful. Pointless as relevant. Living, working their entire life, and then dying as uneventfully as the next. Swallowed up in the annals of history and promptly forgotten.”
Michael C. Grumley, Cold Storage
“A prism in which the wealthy viewed the world. How they saw the masses and the classes. What many of them privately referred to as the sheep. The simple, the unintelligent, and the unambitious. Impressionable people living the same life day after day, content in trudging through existence with only the aspirations given to them by media and society. Content in accepting the mundane as meaningful. Pointless as relevant. Living, working their entire life, and then dying as uneventfully as the next. Swallowed up in the annals of history and promptly forgotten.”
Michael C. Grumley, Cold Storage