Close to Home Quotes
Close to Home
by
Michael Magee13,849 ratings, 4.02 average rating, 1,533 reviews
Close to Home Quotes
Showing 1-4 of 4
“Because if you’re talking about one person’s ma or da and the troubles they carry around with them, you’re talking about all of them, including, in most cases, your own, and the only thing worse than seeing someone’s da standing round the corner from the off-licence trying to get someone to go in for him because he’s barred, or someone’s ma climbing into the back seat of a souped-up Supra at three o’clock in the afternoon only to reappear a few hours later, barely able to stand, is to acknowledge it for what it is and not as something you catch out of the corner of your eye every once in a while and pretend to ignore.”
― Close to Home
― Close to Home
“There’s only so much partying you can do, and when there are fewer and fewer people to party with, it starts to feel like there’s nowhere else to go. You’re stuck in this hole with the same three or four faces for the rest of your life, drinking, taking gear, hanging around the local until there’s no one left to talk to.”
― Close to Home
― Close to Home
“ecauseif you’re talking about one person’s ma or da and the troubles they carryaround with them, you’re talking about all of them, including, in most cases,
your own, and the only thing worse than seeing someone’s da standing round the corner from the off-licence trying to get someone to go in for him because he’s barred, or someone’s ma climbing into the back seat of a souped-upnSupra at three o’clock in the afternoon only to reappear a few hours later, barely able to stand, is to acknowledge it for what it is and not as something you catch out of the corner of your eye every once in a while and pretend to ignore.”
― Close to Home
your own, and the only thing worse than seeing someone’s da standing round the corner from the off-licence trying to get someone to go in for him because he’s barred, or someone’s ma climbing into the back seat of a souped-upnSupra at three o’clock in the afternoon only to reappear a few hours later, barely able to stand, is to acknowledge it for what it is and not as something you catch out of the corner of your eye every once in a while and pretend to ignore.”
― Close to Home
“We’re going to hear some poems, he told them, and he wasn’t ashamed to say it. In fact, it was as if going to a poetry reading was a completely normal thing to do,”
― Close to Home
― Close to Home
