The Couple Next Door Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
The Couple Next Door The Couple Next Door by Shari Lapena
704,526 ratings, 3.80 average rating, 45,853 reviews
Open Preview
The Couple Next Door Quotes Showing 1-30 of 44
“Her thoughts speed up and become less rational; her mind makes fantastic leaps. It's not that things don't make sense to her when she's like this — sometimes they make 'more' sense. They make sense the way dreams do. It's only when the dream is over that you see how odd it all was, how it actually didn't make sense at all.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“...nobody makes that much money without taking advantage of somebody. It's much easier to make money if you don't care who you hurt. If you have scruples, it's much harder to get rich.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“The wife is always the last to know, right?”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“Everyone is faking it, all of them pretending to be something they’re not. The whole world is built on lies and deceit.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“She knows how judgemental mothers are, how good it feels to sit in judgement of someone else.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“She knows she can’t survive this on her own.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“when a wife goes missing, the husband is usually the prime suspect, and probably vice versa.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“She makes things work the best she can, but it isn’t easy. Marco”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“Such kindness, and such thoughtless cruelty.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“It’s much easier to make money if you don’t care who you hurt. If you have scruples, it’s much harder to get rich.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“clumsy fingers, feeling faintly guilty about going through his wife’s purse. It feels private. But this is an emergency. He dumps the contents onto the middle of their neatly made bed. Her wallet is there, her change purse, lipstick, pen, a tissue packet—it’s all there. Not an errand then. Maybe she stepped out to help a friend? An emergency of some kind? Still, she would have taken her purse with her if she was driving the car. And wouldn’t she have called him by now if she could? She could borrow someone else’s phone. It’s not like her to be thoughtless. Tom sits on the edge of the bed, quietly unraveling. His heart is beating too fast. Something is wrong. He thinks that maybe he should call the police. He”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“They will be judged, by the police and by everybody else. Serves them right, leaving their baby alone. She would think that, too, if it had happened to someone else. She knows how judgmental mothers are, how good it feels to sit in judgment of someone else.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“I was crying when I fed her because I was sad about being fat and unattractive, and Cynthia—who is supposed to be a friend—had been flirting with my husband all evening.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“Anne remains in the living room, cradling her sleeping”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“He must remain objective. He can’t afford to become emotionally invested in his cases. He would never survive.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“listening to music. When we get home, we have to wake her. So no, I wouldn’t recommend her.” Rasbach nods, makes a note. Then he looks up and says, “Tell me about your husband.” “What about my husband?” “What kind of man is he?” “He’s”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“He stares at her back and thinks about how much she has changed since the baby was born. It was entirely unexpected. They'd looked forward to the baby so much together--decorating the nursery, shopping for baby things, attending the birth-preparation classes, feeling the baby kick in her tummy. They had been some of the happiest months of his life. It had never occurred to him that it would be hard afterward. He hadn't seen it coming.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“out the back to the waiting car when he checked on her. He knew it would make him and Anne look bad, leaving the baby home alone, but he thought it could work. Had he felt there was any actual risk to Cora at all, he never would have done it. Not for any amount of money. It’s been brutally hard these last few days, not seeing his daughter. Not being able to hold her, to kiss the top of her head, to smell her skin. Not being able to call and check on her and make sure she’s all right. Not knowing what the hell is going on. Marco tells himself again that Cora is fine. He just has to hang on. It will all be over soon. They’ll have Cora back and the money. He especially regrets how hard this is on Anne, but he tells himself that she’ll be so happy to have Cora back that maybe it will give her some perspective.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“Rasbach takes the clear plastic container from Jennings and studies the label: ANNE CONTI, SERTRALINE, 50 MG. Sertraline, Rasbach knows, is a powerful antidepressant.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“But it’s not enough to be handsome—one should preferably have charisma, or at least warmth.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“Rasbach has been suspicious of Richard Dries almost from the start. To his mind—perhaps it’s a prejudice, stemming from Rasbach’s own working-class background—nobody makes that much money without taking advantage of somebody. It’s much easier to make money if you don’t care who you hurt. If you have scruples, it’s much harder to get rich.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“Marco hurries up the front steps of the house he’d left just hours before and bursts into the living room. He sees Anne on the sofa, cradling their tiny daughter in her arms. A uniformed police officer is standing behind the sofa, as if protecting her. Anne’s father and mother are not in the room. Marco wonders where they are, what has happened.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“Whenever there was an opening for a new show, she would invite him; there would be champagne and hors d’oeuvres, women in smart dresses and men in well-cut suits. Anne would circulate around the room, stopping to talk with the people clustered in front of the paintings—wild, abstract splashes of color or more somber, tonal works. Marco didn’t understand any of it. The most beautiful, the most arresting thing in the room, for him, would always be Anne. He would stay out of her way, stand over by the bar eating cheese, or off to the side, and watch her do her thing. She had been trained for it, getting her degree in art history and modern art, but more than that, she had an instinct for it, a passion. Marco had not grown up with art, but it was part of her life, and he loved her for it.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“Sometimes I wonder if it was right for us to keep things from him when you were younger.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“rapidly around the second floor of the house while”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“She glances at the baby monitor sitting at the end of the table, its small red light glowing like the tip of a cigarette.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“he wouldn’t be driving an Audi –”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“Who goes to a dinner party next door and leaves her baby alone in the house? What kind of mother does such a thing? She feels the familiar agony set in – she is not a good mother. So what if the sitter canceled? They should have brought Cora with them, put her in her portable playpen. But Cynthia had said no children.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“nobody makes that much money without taking advantage of somebody. It’s much easier to make money if you don’t care who you hurt. If you have scruples, it’s much harder to get rich.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door
“has regrets now, but it will all be worth it. When he gets Cora back and he has the money, everything will be okay. They’ll have their daughter. And he’ll have two and a half million dollars to get his business on track again. The thought of taking money from his father-in-law makes Marco smile. He hates the bastard.”
Shari Lapena, The Couple Next Door

« previous 1