Lake of Sorrows Quotes

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Lake of Sorrows (Nora Gavin, #2) Lake of Sorrows by Erin Hart
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Lake of Sorrows Quotes Showing 1-11 of 11
“Making yourself an outcast was one way to avoid the pain of having it done to you.”
Erin Hart, Lake of Sorrows
“believe that what happens in the world never really goes away. Everything that has been remains somehow, makes an impression. Some things make stronger impressions than others, but it all leaves something behind, some change, some ripple in time, don’t you think? It’s probably the best we can hope for.”
Erin Hart, Lake of Sorrows
“All of us insist upon our illusions, upon substituting dreams and distorted memories for the real thing.”
Erin Hart, Lake of Sorrows
“Was it possible for the living to haunt their fellow creatures? For something as intangible as the mere memory of a gesture to slip into the subconscious unbidden and remain there until some firing synapse, some chemical key set it free?”
Erin Hart, Lake of Sorrows
“All of us insist on our illusions, upon substituting dreams and distorted memories for the real thing...It seemed to him that delusion was the most natural of human states; it was honesty that was the aberration.”
Erin Hart, Lake of Sorrows
“Their union had always seemed a near-perfect balance: strong individuals married together to make a separate entity greater than either of them alone, a mystery unfathomable even to themselves.”
Erin Hart, Lake of Sorrows
“A group of people was something like a primitive organism, affected by mood and atmosphere and even weather, resistant to change, with each member playing a specific role. Leaders, followers, scourges, clowns—every group had them, and people slipped into their parts as easily as actors taking on familiar stock roles.”
Erin Hart, Lake of Sorrows
“The grass did not live in order to be cut down, but in spite of cutting. Its nature was to grow and go to seed and grow again. He felt the rebellion in his own soul swell sympathetically whenever he stood on this small patch of earth. The world was meant to be wild, unbridled.”
Erin Hart, Lake of Sorrows
“It seemed to him that delusion was the most natural of human states; it was honesty that was the aberration.”
Erin Hart, Lake of Sorrows
“What was sport but a thin veneer over the factional fighting it had replaced—ritualized violence, bloody entertainment?”
Erin Hart, Lake of Sorrows
“And what was sport, underneath, but a kind of sanitized, ritualized violence?”
Erin Hart, Lake of Sorrows