Joniece Frank Quotes & Sayings
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Top Joniece Frank Quotes

It's not until she sits up and wipes her eyes that I realize she's crying. My words are like knives; they cut into the people I love. It will be worse if you touch her, I think, a worse lie. But I ignore this thought, shifting down the bench to put my arm around her - my daughter - and as I do, she weeps openly, pressing her face against my damp shirt. — Adam Haslett

But without William K, I would have forgotten that I had not been born on this journey. That I had lived before this. — Dave Eggers

Descriptions of my work depress me. They make me feel pinned down. — Thom Mayne

There are only two times. Now and too late. — Anh Do

These ways to make people buy were strange and new to us, and many bought for the sheer pleasure at first of holding in the hand and talking of something new. And once this was done, it was like opium, we could no longer do without this new bauble, and thus, though we hated the foreigners and though we knew they were ruining us, we bought their goods. Thus I learned the art of the foreigners, the art of creating in the human heart restlessness, disquiet, hunger for new things, and these new desires became their best helpers. — Han Suyin

I won't let you take advantage of women! Here's the Mars Power flame of anger! (ROAR) I'll punish you in high heels!
- Rei/Sailor Mars — Naoko Takeuchi

This is what my
voice sounds like
I don't need to be
talking to
someone else
To hear it — David Levithan

I don't feel the need to prove myself by writing the next generational novel. — Camilla Lackberg

Every day is the start of something beautiful. — Matt Nathanson

I'm a big fan of the misunderstood, the vilified, the underdog, the breaking of myths. — Dominic Monaghan

Men (and women) indeed become strange when seeking gods. As the present work will show, however, they become even stranger when seeking devils. — Robert Anton Wilson

There was a docudrama that was made, called 'The Death Of A Princess,' which was about a true story in Saudi Arabia. It was about a public execution for adultery. And when the movie was aired on British television, the Saudi government threatened to cut off oil exports and to cut off diplomatic relations. — Evan Osnos