Seabreeze Summer Quotes

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Seabreeze Summer (Summer Beach #2) Seabreeze Summer by Jan Moran
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Seabreeze Summer Quotes Showing 1-21 of 21
“reverberated”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“chasms”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“Admiration.”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“intoned,”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“if you feel like you need a break, I understand. I love you, Shells. We’re sisters forever.”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“No,” Ivy cried out, struggling against Rowan. “Let go of me.”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“He began to play Yesterday, an old Beatles song.”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“I love this, and I wish we could keep on driving,” Ivy said, the wind whipping a few loose strands of hair back from her forehead that had blown from her ponytail “I haven’t seen the Monterrey Peninsula or the Bay area in years. Or the wine country. I’ve been gone too long.”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“PCH,”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“Forty-five might seem old to you now, but I promise you it isn’t. I’m not yet half as old as my grandmother was when she passed away. I hope I still have a lot of living to do.”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“tumultuous”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“belittled”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“ruminating”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“moratorium”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“Bennett wondered why it took a lifetime for many—if not most—people to figure out that life was meant to be celebrated.”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“disseminated.”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“Easy to get loaded down with stuff—and stuff often holds you back from making important decisions.”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“A former marine, Paula Stark has been a firefighter for twenty-five years, and Summer Beach had been fortunate to get her. Although the local fire department served the community, they were also brought into the larger firefighting efforts in the region when needed.”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“ginger flowers”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“All marriages are compromises, even down to the daily choice for dinner. No man is perfect, and no woman is perfect. How well they compromise—and accept and agree to those compromises—determines their level of happiness. As does the equitable share of power. If the balance is off, then the partner with more power must be more considerate. Otherwise, that partner may take advantage of the position.”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer
“Whenever he had a problem, he found that being near the water put things in perspective.”
Jan Moran, Seabreeze Summer