Beneath the Sugar Sky Quotes

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Beneath the Sugar Sky (Wayward Children, #3) Beneath the Sugar Sky by Seanan McGuire
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Beneath the Sugar Sky Quotes Showing 1-30 of 63
“There is kindness in the world, if we know how to look for it. If we never start denying it the door.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Children have always tumbled down rabbit holes, fallen through mirrors, been swept away by unseasonal floods or carried off by tornadoes. Children have always traveled, and because they are young and bright and full of contradictions, they haven’t always restricted their travel to the possible. Adulthood brings limitations like gravity and linear space and the idea that bedtime is a real thing, and not an artificially imposed curfew. Adults can still tumble down rabbit holes and into enchanted wardrobes, but it happens less and less with every year they live. Maybe this is a natural consequence of living in a world where being careful is a necessary survival trait, where logic wears away the potential for something bigger and better than the obvious. Childhood melts, and flights of fancy are replaced by rules. Tornados kill people: they don’t carry them off to magical worlds. Talking foxes are a sign of fever, not guides sent to start some grand adventure.
But children, ah, children. Children follow the foxes, and open the wardrobes, and peek beneath the bridge. Children climb the walls and fall down the wells and run the razor’s edge of possibility until sometimes, just sometimes, the possible surrenders and shows them the way to go home.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“That's why people shouldn't get too hung up on labels. Sometimes I think that's part of what we do wrong. We try to make things make sense, even when they're never going to.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Sometimes that’s all you can do. Just keep getting through until you don’t have to do it anymore, however much time that takes, however difficult it is.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“For others, the lure of a world where they fit is too great to escape, and they will spend the rest of their lives rattling at windows and peering at locks, trying to find the way home.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Adults can still tumble down rabbit holes and into enchanted wardrobes, but it happens less and less with every year they live. Maybe this is a natural consequence of living in a world where being careful is a necessary survival trait, where logic wears away the potential for something bigger and better than the obvious.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Adulthood brings limitations like gravity and linear space and the idea that bedtime is a real thing, and not an artificially imposed curfew.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Nobody promised me a happy ending. They didn’t even promise me a happy existence.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“We’re all puzzle boxes, skeleton and skin, soul and shadow.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Breathe. It's going to be okay." Cora took a deep breath, eyeing him.
"You really think so?"
"No," he said baldly. "It's never okay. But I told myself that every night when I was in Prism. I told myself that every morning when I woke up, still in Prism. And I got through, Sometimes that's all you can do. Just keep getting through until you don't have to do it anymore, however much time that takes, however difficult it is.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Grave robbing was still viewed as socially inappropriate, and doing it when the sun was up was generally viewed as unwise.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“We’re teenagers in a magical land following a dead girl and a disappearing girl into a field of organic, pesticide-free candy corn,” said Kade. “I think weird is a totally reasonable response to the situation. We’re whistling through the graveyard to keep ourselves from totally losing our shit.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Everything did, if left long enough to its own devices. Futures, pasts, it didn’t matter. Everything fell apart.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“The rules of the school are simple. Heal. Hope. And if you can, find your way back where you belong.

No Solicitation. No visitors.

No quests.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“I'm just a candy corn farmer. My only part in this play was loving your mother and raising you, and I did both of them as well as I could, but that didn't make me worldly, and it didn't make me wise. It made me a man with a hero for a wife and a daughter who was going to do something great someday, and that was all I wanted to be. I never saved the day. I never challenged the gods. I was the person you could come home to when the quest was over, and I'd greet you with a warm fudge pie and a how was your day, and I'd never feel like I was being left out just because I was forever left behind.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“He liked the excuse to talk to people about their shared differences, which became their shared similarities when held up to the right light. They had all survived something. The fact that they had survived different somethings didn't change the fact that they would always be, in certain ways, the same.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“There's always more than one way to find something out. People only say there's only one way when they want an excuse to do something incredibly stupid without getting called on it. There are lots of ways to find out, and some of them even involve not pissing off a man who goes by 'the Lord of the Dead.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Everyone who wound up at Eleanor West's School - everyone who found a doorway - understood what it was to spend a lifetime waiting for something that other people wouldn't necessarily understand. Not because they were better than other people and not because they were worse, but because they had a need trapped somewhere in their bones, gnawing constantly, trying to get out.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Nadya, who had spotted the three of them, was waving her arms frantically over her head, signaling her distress. In case this wasn’t enough, she shouted, “Over here! Next to the naked lady!” “A cake’s a cake, whether or not it’s been frosted,” said the stranger primly. “You are not a cake, you are a human being, and I can see your vagina,” snapped Nadya. The stranger shrugged. “It’s a nice one. I’m not ashamed of it.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Every world gets to make its own rules. Sometimes those rules are going to be impossible. That doesn't make them any less enforceable.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Sugar, flour, and cinnamon won't make a house a home,
So bake your walls of gingerbread and sweeten them with bone.
Eggs and milk and whipping cream, butter in the churn,
Bake our queen a castle in the hopes that she'll return.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Magical thinking might seem like nonsense to some people, but he had danced with skeletons by the light of a marigold moon, he had kissed the glimmering skull of a girl with no lips and loved her as he had never loved anything or anyone in his life, and he thought he’d earned a certain amount of nonsense, as long as it helped him get by.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“You were a mermaid, weren't you? That's what Nadya said."
"I still am," said Cora. "I just have my scales under my skin for now.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“They can be hard for their families to understand, those returned, used-up miracle children. They sound like liars to people who never had a doorway of their own. They sound like dreamers. They sound... unwell, to the charitable, and simply sick to the cruel.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Elsewhere was a legend and a lie, until it came looking for you.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“That makes no sense at all. That means it may well work. Go, my darlings, and bring your lost and shattered sister home.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“WHAT WE BURY IS NOT LOST, ONLY SET ASIDE”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“I like existing. I'm not ready to unexist just because of stupid causality. I didn't invite stupid causality to my birthday party, so it doesn't get to give me any presents.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Frosting isn’t a good medium for lengthy dissertations on fate.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky
“Children, ah, children. Children follow the foxes, and open the wardrobes, and peek beneath the bridge. Children climb the walls and fall down the wells and run the razor’s edge of possibility until sometimes, just sometimes, the possible surrenders and shows them the way to go home.”
Seanan McGuire, Beneath the Sugar Sky

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