Truly, Devious Quotes

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Truly, Devious (Truly Devious, #1) Truly, Devious by Maureen Johnson
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Truly, Devious Quotes Showing 1-30 of 144
“You have to take things as they are, not how you hear they're supposed to be.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“Where her books were, she was. Get the books right and the rest will follow. Now she could address the rest of the room.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly Devious
“Look! A riddle! Time for fun!
Should we use a rope or gun?
Knives are sharp and gleam so pretty
Poison’s slow, which is a pity
Fire is festive, drowning’s slow
Hanging’s a ropy way to go
A broken head, a nasty fall
A car colliding with a wall
Bombs make a very jolly noise
Such ways to punish naughty boys!
What shall we use? We can’t decide.
Just like you cannot run or hide.
Ha ha.
Truly,
Devious”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“Of course I worry too much,” Nate said. “But I’m usually right. The people who worry are always right. That’s how that works.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly Devious
“When you have enough power and money, you can dictate the meanings of words.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“There is nothing so serious as a game.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“10/30/38
Where do you look for someone who's never really there?
Always on a staircase but never on a stair”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“Albert Ellingham said knowledge was his religion and libraries were his church, so he built a church.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly Devious
“It was like she had been punched in the gut. Stevie said stuff like that all the time and was told she was wrong. David said it once and got a nod and a compliment.
Oh, the magic of dudes. If only they bottled it.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“Anything is better than doing what I'm supposed to be doing.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“I annoy people," he said. "Believe me. I'm aware. It's an effective way to communicate if you don't have any other options. If you can't get in through the door, throw a rock through the window. And I think maybe you're the same way. - David, to Stevie”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“Did they know that Arthur Conan Doyle went on to investigate mysteries in his real life and absolved a man for a crime for which he has been convicted? Did they know how Agatha Christie brilliantly staged her own disappearance in order to exact an elegant revenge on a cheating husband? They probably did not. And no one was going to discount Stevie Bell, who had gotten into this school on the wings of her interest in the Ellingham case, and who had been a bystander at a death that was now looking more and more suspicious.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“What you lack in any investigation is time. With every passing hour, evidence slips away. Crime scenes are compromised by people and the elements. Things are moved, altered, smeared, shifted. Organisms rot. Wind blows dust and contaminants. Memories change and fade. As you move away from the event, you move away from the solution.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“Sherlock said, “I consider that a man’s brain originally is like a little empty attic, and you have to stock it with such furniture as you choose.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly Devious
“Sometimes Stevie felt bad for her parents. Their idea of what constituted interesting was so limited. They were never going to have as much fun as she did.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“Games are not fun when you don't know you're playing.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“Few words are more chilling when put together than make friends. The command to pair bond sent ice water through Stevie’s veins. She wanted falling rocks. But she knew what would happen if she didn’t do the talking—her parents would. And if her parents started, anything could happen.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“There is something about early mornings that changes your perceptions subtly. The light is new; no one has put on the defences of the day. All is reset and not quite real yet.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“I always wanted stories to be real, so I started writing my own.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“Last things were so strange. Most people had no control over of what their last acts would be.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“QUESTION EVERYTHING; STAND BACK, I’M GOING TO TRY SCIENCE!; I REJECT YOUR REALITY AND SUBSTITUTE MY OWN.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“That was something they taught you in anxiety therapy- the thoughts may come, but you don't have to chase them all. It was sort of the opposite of good detective work, in which you had to follow every lead.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“For anyone who has ever dreamed of finding a body in the library.
- Dedication of Truly Devious”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“The critical scene of the mystery is when the detective enters. The action shifts to Sherlock’s sitting room. The little Belgian man with the waxed moustache appears in the lobby of the grand hotel. The gentle old woman with a bag of knitting comes to visit her niece when the poison pen letters start going around the village. The private detective comes back to the office after a night of drinking and finds the woman with the cigarette and the veiled hat this is when things will change.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“Panic attacks are mean little freaks.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly Devious
“Shock is a funny thing. Things get both sharp and fuzzy. Time stretches and distorts. Things come rushing into focus and seem larger than they are. Other things vanish to a single point.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
tags: shock
“People say depression lies. Anxiety is just stupid. It’s unable to tell the difference between things that are actually scary (being buried alive, for example) and things that are not scary at all (being in bed under the covers). It hits all the same buttons. Stop. Go. Up. Down. It’s all the same to anxiety.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly Devious
“The moose is a lie," Stevie Bell said.
Her mother turned to her, looking like she often looked - a bit tired, forced to engage in whatever Stevie was about to say out of parental obligation.
"What?" she said.
Stevie pointed out the window of the coach.
"See that?" Stevie indicated a sign that simply read MOOSE. "We've passed five of those. That's a lot of promise. Not one moose."
"Stevie ..."
"They also promised falling rocks. Where are my falling rocks?"
"Stevie ..."
"I'm a strong believer in truth in advertising," Stevie said.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious
“His voice was deep and smooth and rich, like what gravy might sound like if gravy could talk.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly Devious
“Vitamin D,” Stevie said. “You need it.” “You don’t know that,” he said. “I want to eat my meat in my room with the lights off.” “As a writer, are those really the words you want to use?” Stevie asked.”
Maureen Johnson, Truly, Devious

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