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What If You & Me (Say Everything, #2) What If You & Me by Roni Loren
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“Sometimes fighting on behalf of someone else helps us remember that our own life is worth fighting for too.”
Roni Loren, What If You & Me
“It sounds weird, but horror is often about hope. We want to believe we can be the final girl. That the good guys or girls can still beat evil despite it all.”
Roni Loren, What If You & Me
“Horror stories and loves stories are two sides of the same coin. Both can involve obsession, being overtaken by feelings you can't control, being driven to doing crazy out-of-character stuff, being at someone else's mercy. Both involve death. [...] Horror involves actual death. But love stories threaten emotional death if the person doesn't end up with the one they love, or that's the theory they're selling us.”
Roni Loren, What If You & Me
“He listened. He hadn't pushed or rushed her. He hadn't cajoled. But more than that, he hadn't made her feel wrong or broken for being the way she was. He'd simply been with her in that moment, meeting her where she was and seeming to enjoy what thye were doing as much as she did.”
Roni Loren, What If You & Me
“Eliza had once told her that until you can learn to love yourself, no one else can love you enough to make up for that hole.”
Roni Loren, What If You & Me
“Maybe she saw through his bullshit facade because she knew how to wear one too. They were shopping at the same costume shop.”
Roni Loren, What If You & Me
“This movie has boobs. Is that going to make it awkward to watch with your neighbor?"
"Oh, boobs. No, it's fine. I've seen those before."
She grinned and reached out to pat his knee. "Good for you, Hill!”
Roni Loren, What If You & Me
“The past couldn’t be changed. The future couldn’t be controlled or guaranteed. All he could do was deal with what was going on now—here, in the present. What did he want his life to look like now?”
Roni Loren, What If You & Me
“People seem to think horror is anti-woman, but I think a lot of it subverts gender dynamics. In most cases, you don’t want to be the dude in the horror movie. The dudes get dead. They ride in like the hero to save the ladies and the villain is like—nope. The women save themselves.”
Roni Loren, What If You & Me