Sara Levine Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy the top 14 famous quotes, sayings and quotations by Sara Levine.
Famous Quotes By Sara Levine
People approach writers, assuming we pull a perfect text out of our nose each time (well spelled). Spelling is the least of it. — Sara Levine
If life were a sea adventure, I knew: I wouldn't be sailor, pirate, or cabin boy but more likely a barnacle clinging to the side of the boat. — Sara Levine
You do know what I mean about Mom. It's like she radios into headquarters for Dad's feelings when she senses hers need backup. — Sara Levine
A painful truth I'd learn later: you may be ready to grow, but you can't fertilize friends and grow them with you. — Sara Levine
And found there one of those huge comprehensive anthologies of literature, the sort of thing which, on a bad day, can induce an inferiority complex ... — Sara Levine
My thoughts don't really bump along this way, but they do bump somehow, and it's more honest
more pedagogically useful, more truthful
to arrange them in a loose, disconnected, provisional way than to deliver only the conclusions. — Sara Levine
Grief is a wound that needs attention in order to heal. We can have pancakes. — Sara Levine
BOLDNESS
RESOLUTION
INDEPENDENCE
HORN-BLOWING — Sara Levine
They are suspicious of humanism, nervous about too much style, and wary of public celebrations of the personal. — Sara Levine
The essay is a modest genre. It doesn't mean to change the world. Instead it says: let me tell you what happened to me. — Sara Levine
Don't tell me you're reading it,' she said, as if I were doing something to the book, whereas in fact the book was doing something to me. — Sara Levine
I knew very well what Lars meant when he praised me, and held me, and indicated through a caress that he liked me just the way I was; I knew, better than he knew himself, that he wanted to ensure he never be confronted with what, in his own personality, might need pruning or pushing or prodding, that behind every show of support he gave, for me here, for me now, there lurked a terrified refusal to acknowledge his own potential to grow. — Sara Levine