Famous Quotes & Sayings

Hunger Games Catching Fire Katniss And Peeta Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy reading and share 10 famous quotes about Hunger Games Catching Fire Katniss And Peeta with everyone.

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Pinterest Share on Linkedin

Top Hunger Games Catching Fire Katniss And Peeta Quotes

Hunger Games Catching Fire Katniss And Peeta Quotes By Suzanne Collins

I'm so tired, Katniss. — Suzanne Collins

Hunger Games Catching Fire Katniss And Peeta Quotes By Suzanne Collins

Peeta, how come I never know when you're having a nightmare?" I say.
"I don't know. I don't think I cry out or thrash around or anything. I just come to, paralyzed with terror," he says.
"You should wake me," I say, thinking about how I can interrupt his sleep two or three times on a bad night. About how long it can take to calm me down.
"It's not necessary. My nightmares are usually about losing you," he says. "I'm okay once I realize you're here. — Suzanne Collins

Hunger Games Catching Fire Katniss And Peeta Quotes By Suzanne Collins

The beauty of this idea is that my decision to keep Peeta alive at the expense of my own life is itself an act of defiance. A refusal to play the Hunger Games by the Capitol's rules. My private agenda dovetails completely with my public one. And if I really could save Peeta ... in terms of a revolution, this would be ideal. Because I will be more valuable dead. They can turn me into some kind of martyr for the cause and paint my face on banners, and it will do more to rally people than anything I could do if I was living. But Peeta would be more valuable alive, and tragic, because he will be able to turn his pain into words that will transform people. — Suzanne Collins

Hunger Games Catching Fire Katniss And Peeta Quotes By Suzanne Collins

As we curve around into the loop of the City Circle, I can see that a couple of other stylists have tried to steal Cinna and Portia's idea of illuminating their tributes. The electric-light-studded outfits from District 3, where they make electronics, at least make sense. But what are the livestock keepers from Distric 10, who are dressed as cows, doing with flaming belts? Broiling themselves? Pathetic. — Suzanne Collins

Hunger Games Catching Fire Katniss And Peeta Quotes By David Levithan

This, I've discovered, is the best way to waste time, because it isn't really wasted
surrounded by friends, talking crap and sometimes talking for real, with snacks around and something on a screen. — David Levithan

Hunger Games Catching Fire Katniss And Peeta Quotes By James Lankford

The different Washington, D.C.-based groups and the different special interest groups, they all want to be able to pick who they want to be a senator. They don't speak for everyone, and they definitely don't speak for Oklahomans. — James Lankford

Hunger Games Catching Fire Katniss And Peeta Quotes By James Gleick

Thought interferes with the probability of events, and, in the long run therefore, with entropy. - David L. Watson — James Gleick

Hunger Games Catching Fire Katniss And Peeta Quotes By Deepak Chopra

I can affect change by transforming the only thing that I ever had control over in the first place and that is myself. — Deepak Chopra

Hunger Games Catching Fire Katniss And Peeta Quotes By Matthew Woodring Stover

I fear Michaelson not at all. Michaelson is a fiction, you fools. The truth of him is Caine. You do not comprehend the distinction; and so he will destroy you. — Matthew Woodring Stover

Hunger Games Catching Fire Katniss And Peeta Quotes By Haifa Zangana

Writing about memories is an elusive process. It often begins with a good intention: to convey the truth. What happens in reality is that we only write down what passes through the censors' eyes. The censors here are the ambient time and space, social and political conditions, and the psychological changers the writer herself. What one writes now is certainly not what actually happened. It is but a vague indicator of what might have happened, a mixture of illusive and contracted images, a dream, or an act conditioned by either a denial or a desire to see past events shaped by what is yearned for in the present. p. 153 — Haifa Zangana