A Place to Hang the Moon Quotes
A Place to Hang the Moon
by
Kate Albus22,739 ratings, 4.56 average rating, 4,511 reviews
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A Place to Hang the Moon Quotes
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“The first words of a new book are so delicious—like the first taste of a cookie fresh from the oven and not yet properly cooled.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“It is often the case that, at times of great anxiety, when the diversion of a good story should seem most welcome, one is least equipped to focus one’s mind on reading.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“A librarian seemed a good sort of friend to have.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“Besides which, I really ought to send her a book instead. Though she’s not much of a reader.” She paused. “Evidence as to her character.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“The librarian chuckled. “I suppose there are rather a lot of orphan stories out there.” “Why do grown-ups write so many of them?” William asked. “I hadn’t really thought about it,” Mrs. Müller confessed. “Perhaps they think children fancy the notion of living on their own, without adults to tell them what to do. It’s quite daft, if you think about it, isn’t it?”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“Fibs, you must know, are entirely acceptable when they serve the purpose of getting one to the library.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“This sort of love, the children knew only from one another- and from books.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“The librarian took this all in, standing by the fire and observing the children for a while, letting the silence be. Somehow, it didn’t feel awkward, the way silences often do. Perhaps librarians are more used to quiet than most.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“As the children sank into sleep, the words of the familiar rhyming tale were comfort and tenderness, ritual and home. A sort of prayer. A sort of lullaby. It set them on the path to dreams that felt rather like hope.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“Inside, the children were greeted by the sort of cool and reverent silence known only to places that house books- well, and perhaps artwork and religious artifacts. Mismatched bookcases stood back to back and side to side, making raucously wobbly passageways of words.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“The very idea. To pick just one favorite book seemed impossible as - well, as finding a family through a mass wartime evacuation. But there you have it.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“Edmund took in the boy's mended jacket, the eyes underlined in shadows, the skin above his upper lip chapped raw from a dripping nose gone unattended, and saw the sort of hunger whose endless digs a pit in a person. Being eleven, Edmund wouldn't have put it quite in those words, but he recognized it nonetheless.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“A Little Princess. This one, Anna hadn’t read. She paged through the book, catching phrases: warm things, kind things, sweet things…nothing so strong as rage, except what makes you hold it in…a princess in rags and tatters…”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“William, Edmund, and Anna knew, somewhere deep in the place where we know things that we cannot say aloud, that they had never lived in the sort of home one reads about in stories - one of warmth and affection and certainty in the knowledge that someone believes you hung the moon.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“Their pages spoke of the past, a reminder that the battered old world had whirred for a very long time indeed, and that even his latest buffeting would likely be withstood.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“WVS”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“Anne of Green Gables?” she asked.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“Like a parlor, only friendlier, I hope.” Crinkles appeared at the corners of her eyes. “That’s where Father Christmas has left your things.” Anna gasped. “I knew he’d find us.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“know, Will,” Edmund said. “You needn’t worry. I won’t muck anything up.” He peeled back the duvet, climbed into the bed, and curled himself into a ball. At this, Mrs. Müller appeared in the doorway bearing a load of crisp white linens, patchwork quilts, and hot-water bottles wrapped in knitted cases the same dove gray as the blanket. On top of the teetering pile was a book. As she set her load down on the dressing table, she looked at Edmund. “Lord love you, child.” She went to the bedside, lifted the duvet, and tucked a hot-water bottle at Edmund’s feet. She tested his forehead once again with the palm of her hand. “Perhaps we’ll forgo the clean linens, just for tonight,” she said. “I hate to extract you, Edmund.” “Yes. I mean—thank you,” he murmured. The librarian smiled and looked at William and Anna. “If I had someplace else to put you two, I’d keep you out of the sick room, but short of making up beds on the floor somewhere…” She trailed off. “We’ll be fine,” William said. “Honestly.” Anna nodded in agreement. None of them wanted to be separated, anyhow. “In bed, then,” Mrs. Müller said. “All three of you.” She pulled back the duvet on the other side of the bed and laid down another hot-water bottle. Anna climbed into the middle, and William took his place beside her. The librarian tucked the duvet around the three of them and brushed each one’s cheek with a tenderness that even Edmund found acceptable. She retrieved the book she’d carried in with the linens and handed it to William. “Perhaps you’re all too old for bedtime stories, but what sort of librarian would I be if I didn’t provide you with some reading material?” For a long moment, the children only looked at one another. Mrs. Müller drew the wrong conclusion from their silence. “Oh, dear. You are entirely too old for bedtime stories, aren’t you?” She took a step back. “Not having children of my own, I’m sure to make a mess of these things—” “No,” Anna whispered. “We’re not too old.” Mrs. Müller looked at the boys. “We’re not too old,” William agreed. “Definitely not,” Edmund said, his voice cracking. Perhaps it was his head cold. But probably not. “Well”—the librarian gestured toward the book in William’s hands—“I hope that one will suit you.” “It will,” Anna said. “Good night, then,” the librarian whispered. As she headed for the door, all three children had the same wish. All three children were surprised that it was William who voiced it. “Would you read it to us?”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“Mrs. Müller’s eyes sparkled. “I believe it was the poet, Mr. Yeats, who said that the world is full of magic things, patiently waiting for our senses to grow sharper?”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“To the left was a parlor with an arrangement of tufted chairs. No bookcase, Anna noticed. She supposed bookcases were not necessarily requirements of good parents.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
“Edmund, though he would never admit it, was prone to motion sickness and was just hoping he wouldn’t have to ask the solicitor to pull the car to the side of the road.”
― A Place to Hang the Moon
― A Place to Hang the Moon
