Bitingly Critical Crossword Quotes & Sayings
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Top Bitingly Critical Crossword Quotes

It had been four years. Four years ago, the return home had been to take care of paperwork related to the family registry when I got married. When I thought back on it, what a pointless trip! I thought it was all paperwork. The problem was that nobody else thought it. It comes down to the different ways in which minds work. What's over for one person isn't over for another. But the path splits in two different directions, and so you end up apart.
From that point on there was no hometown for me. Nowhere to return to. What a relief! No one to want me, no one to want anything from me. — Haruki Murakami

But this kiss? It's ruined me. This is the type of kiss I never knew existed. It's like falling and flying, all in the same moment. — Leisa Rayven

I write every book as if I'm dying with no promise of next month, done. — Tyronne Jacques

No matter what business you're in, you can't run in place or someone will pass you by. It doesn't matter how many games you've won. — Jim Valvano

Customer service. That is what it means. — Jon Jones

The very thought of him coming so close to tasting you makes me want to split his head in two. — Kenya Wright

Can you lay your hand on your hearts and tell me I'm really alive? Are you sure I wasn't drowned and we're not all ghosts together? — C.S. Lewis

I think the exploration and the search for who Jesus is, and that 2,000 years later we're still trying to figure out who He was, and did He really rise from the dead ... And I think for me, the answer is 'yes,' and that's why we're talking about Him today. — Erwin McManus

Lord Henry elevated his eyebrows and looked at him in amazement through the thin blue wreaths of smoke that curled up in such fanciful — Oscar Wilde

I think we have erred on the side of being too conservative so far, to tell you the truth. — Roone Arledge

Steady as she goes, Mister Kettle," the grim gaptain said, his voice stern. — Jim Butcher

American movies, English books - remember how they all end?" Gamini asked that night. "The American or the Englishman gets on a plane and leaves. That's it. The camera leaves with him. He looks out of the window at Mombasa or Vietnam or Jakarta, someplace now he can look at through the clouds. The tired hero. A couple of words to the girl beside him. He's going home. So the war, to all purposes, is over. That's enough reality for the West. It's probably the history of the last two hundred years of Western political writing. Go home. Write a book. Hit the circuit. — Michael Ondaatje