The Long Way Home Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
The Long Way Home (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache, #10) The Long Way Home by Louise Penny
79,692 ratings, 4.07 average rating, 7,015 reviews
Open Preview
The Long Way Home Quotes Showing 1-30 of 103
“Fear lives in the head. And courage lives in the heart. The job is to get from one to the other.” “And between the two is the lump in the throat,”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“After spending most of her life scanning the horizon for slights and threats, genuine and imagined, she knew the real threat to her happiness came not from the dot in the distance, but from looking for it. Expecting it. Waiting for it. And in some cases, creating it. Her father had jokingly accused her of living in the wreckage of her future. Until one day she’d looked deep into his eyes and saw he wasn’t joking. He was warning her.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“You too?" She asked Ruth. "How do your poems start out?"

"They start as a lump in the throat," she said.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“I’ll pray that you grow up a brave man in a brave country. I will pray you find a way to be useful.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“[Being jealous] is like drinking acid, and expecting the other person to die.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“Turmoil shook loose all sorts of unpleasant truths. But it took peace to examine them.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“Clara didn't carry a grudge. They were too heavy and she had too far to go.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“If love was compass enough, said Armand quietly, there would be no missing children.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
tags: life, love
“What’s the use of healing, if the life that’s saved is callow and selfish and ruled by fear? There’s a difference between being in sanctuary and being in hiding.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“Most people want to be led. But suppose they choose the wrong leader? They end up with the Donner party.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“Not everyone’s an explorer, and not every explorer makes it back alive. That’s why it takes so much courage.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“There is a balm in Gilead,” she read from the back, “to make the wounded whole—” “There’s power enough in Heaven / To cure a sin-sick soul.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“Annie laughed. She had a face, a body, made not for a Paris runway but for good meals and books by the fire and laughter. She was constructed from, and for, happiness. But it had taken Annie Gamache a long while to find it. To trust it.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“believe in using your head. But not in spending too much time in there. Fear lives in the head. And courage lives in the heart. The job is to get from one to the other.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“This was the great benefit of seeing worse. Fewer things worried him now.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“How do your poems start out?” “They start as a lump in the throat,” she said. “Isn’t that normally just a cocktail olive lodged there?” Olivier asked. “Once,” Ruth admitted. “Wrote quite a good poem before I coughed it up.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“Thinking is an action,”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“Her voice was flat, in a way Myrna recognized from years of listening to people trying to rein in their emotions. To squash them down, flatten, them, and with them their words and their voices. Desperately trying to make the horrific sound mundane.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“Fear lives in the head. And courage lives in the heart. The job is to get from one to the other.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“I’ll pray that you grow up a brave man in a brave country,” Clara said. “I will pray you find a way to be useful,” Gamache completed the quote. Reine-Marie dropped her eyes to her hands and saw the paper napkin twisted and shredded there. Clara nodded slowly. “I think you might be right. Peter went to Paris not to find a new artistic voice. It was simpler than that. He wanted to find a way to be useful.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“That was why she was happy. He now knew that happiness and kindness went together. There was not one without the other.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“I asked him to leave because he stopped caring for me, stopped supporting me. Not because I’d stopped caring for him.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“Sometimes the only way up is down. Sometimes the only way forward is to back up.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“Every morning he went for a walk with his wife, Reine-Marie, and their German shepherd Henri. Tossing the tennis ball ahead of them, they ended up chasing it down themselves when Henri became distracted by a fluttering leaf, or a black fly, or the voices in his head. The dog would race after the ball, then stop and stare into thin air, moving his gigantic satellite ears this way and that. Honing in on some message. Not tense, but quizzical. It was, Gamache recognized, the way most people listened when they heard on the wind the wisps of a particularly beloved piece of music. Or a familiar voice from far away.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“Turmoil shook loose all sorts of unpleasant truths. But it took peace to examine them.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“he’d come to agree with Sister Prejean that no one was as bad as the worst thing they’d done.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“An unsuspected yearning uncovered, discovered. For a simpler time and a simpler life. Before Internet, and climate change, and terrorism. When neighbors worked together, and separation was not a topic or an issue or wise.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“Peter's a lucky man except in one respect, he doesn't seem to know how lucky he is.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“Peter always had a ‘best before’ date stamped on his forehead,” said Ruth. “People who live in their heads do. They start out well enough, but eventually they run out of ideas. And if there’s no imagination, no inspiration to fall back on? Then what?”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home
“Maybe every now and then he simply wept. Not in pain or sadness. The tears were just overwhelming memories, rendered into water, seeping out.”
Louise Penny, The Long Way Home

« previous 1 3 4