Red Mountain Rising Quotes

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Red Mountain Rising (Red Mountain Chronicles, #2) Red Mountain Rising by Boo Walker
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Red Mountain Rising Quotes Showing 1-13 of 13
“Those people who walk into your life for a little while, fill your cup, and then they’re gone.”
Boo Walker, Red Mountain Rising
“Some women fear the fire. Some simply become it. Let’s do this.”
Boo Walker, Red Mountain Rising
“But at our age, we need to go for the smiles.”
Boo Walker, Red Mountain Rising
“I need to stop fighting. I wonder if all the bad luck in my life comes from my own resistance.”
Boo Walker, Red Mountain Rising
“He wrote, ‘The basic difference between an ordinary man and a warrior is that a warrior takes everything as a challenge while an ordinary man takes everything”
Boo Walker, Red Mountain Rising
“Drinking whiskey is always a good idea, but it’s never a good decision.”
Boo Walker, Red Mountain Rising
“don’t”
Boo Walker, Red Mountain Rising
“single mother, or as she called herself, a mombie.”
Boo Walker, Red Mountain Rising
“Methodical Coffee, located in Greenville, South Carolina. She’d been collecting coffee mugs ever”
Boo Walker, Red Mountain Rising
“through the door.”
Boo Walker, Red Mountain Rising
“The basic difference between an ordinary man and a warrior is that a warrior takes everything as a challenge while an ordinary man takes everything as a blessing or a curse.”
Boo Walker, Red Mountain Rising
“This new Margot could laugh all day long at aerial yoga mishaps. She could laugh at herself while loving herself at the same time. She could handle the loneliness. She could handle bad news. Challenges are only opportunities for growth. Margot 3.0 has discipline. She has fire. She has courage and love.”
Boo Walker, Red Mountain Rising
“Balancing a tall stack of dirty dishes bound for the free sink, Adriana crossed the marble floor, dodging, for no reason in particular, the silver fleur- de- lis patterns marking the occasional tile. She passed in between the island with its fat, sturdy legs and the open shelving lining the subway- tile walls on her left. The higher shelves exhibited Margot’s favorite and most worn cookbooks, the ones that had made the cut to travel from Vermont to Red Mountain. The other shelves displayed large glass containers of a wide variety of flours, rice, and beans.”
Boo Walker, Red Mountain Rising