Famous Quotes & Sayings

Peter Geye Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy the top 8 famous quotes, sayings and quotations by Peter Geye.

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Famous Quotes By Peter Geye

Peter Geye Quotes 1728732

Around midnight he'd decided there was but a single course of action: He must remove her ovaries to quell the madness. — Peter Geye

Peter Geye Quotes 140345

And now it's been half a winter since Harry vanished, and I can finally rest my thoughts. I ought to feel relief. Of this I'm sure. But do you know what it's like to hold proof of the last heartache you'll ever know in your own raw hands? I hadn't known, either, not until Gus delivered Harry's red hat yesterday morning, a cork bobber sewed on where the pompom should've been. — Peter Geye

Peter Geye Quotes 257427

I thought how wise he was to lure his rival out into the woods, where every fight's fair. — Peter Geye

Peter Geye Quotes 897172

History and memory aren't the same thing[...] History doesn't abide acts of the imagination but memories depend on it. And memories are as much what we've forgotten as what we recall. History cannot be forgotten. — Peter Geye

Peter Geye Quotes 1425247

Someday your child will be full of wants. What they'll want more than anything, whether they know it or not, is for you to cherish them. — Peter Geye

Peter Geye Quotes 1934114

When she asked what my father taught me, I told her I couldn't put it into words. But then I lay awake watching the snow fall outside and came up with this: how brave a thing it was for him to try to rediscover something, even if it was only himself, not a continent. — Peter Geye

Peter Geye Quotes 2202264

And though I had misgiving--obvious ones, too--one overwhelming thing drove me on: on the borderlands, my father would need me as much as I'd need him. That's what made me so blindly ready to go off with him. What boy doesn't wait his whole childhood to walk alongside his father on equal terms? — Peter Geye

Peter Geye Quotes 2267679

Every person, I have come to believe, has a moment or a place in life when all four points of the compass converge, from when or where their life finally takes--for better or for worse--its fated course. — Peter Geye