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Like Water For Chocolate Magical Realism Quotes & Sayings

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Top Like Water For Chocolate Magical Realism Quotes

Like Water For Chocolate Magical Realism Quotes By Annette Hanshaw

If you want the rainbow, then you must have the rain. — Annette Hanshaw

Like Water For Chocolate Magical Realism Quotes By Peter Guber

I was born curious. — Peter Guber

Like Water For Chocolate Magical Realism Quotes By Lauren Groff

[A Leo, which explains him entirely.] — Lauren Groff

Like Water For Chocolate Magical Realism Quotes By Michael Haneke

The smaller and younger kids are, the more patient you have to be. But if they're gifted, then it's a wonderful present that you're given by having a child like that in your film ... more so than in the case of actors because, for example, if you ask them to play a lion, they don't then play a lion, they actually are a lion. So, a gifted child is something very special. On the other hand, if a child has no gifts in that way it's absolutely hopeless and there's nothing you can do! — Michael Haneke

Like Water For Chocolate Magical Realism Quotes By Sophie Kinsella

In the end, you have to choose whether or not to trust someone. — Sophie Kinsella

Like Water For Chocolate Magical Realism Quotes By Simone Weil

The beauty of the world is the tender smile of Christ to us through matter. He is really present in universal beauty. Love of this beauty proceeds from God and descends into our souls and goes out to God present in the universe. It too is something like a sacrament. — Simone Weil

Like Water For Chocolate Magical Realism Quotes By Manu Joseph

Free love,Ayaan knew, is an enchanting place haunted by demented women — Manu Joseph

Like Water For Chocolate Magical Realism Quotes By John Updike

Teddy was reminded of Paterson, but that polyglot population had appeared healthier, more hopeful, the American mood more fertile then in its promises, and the streets of Silk City with their little yards holding a fuchsia bush or a blue-robed plaster statue of the Virgin more livable than these stacked, stinking, ill-lit dens. He had been a part of the population then, a schoolboy immersed in its details of competition and expectation and childish collusion and hierarchy, alive in its struggle and too absorbed to judge or pity, whereas now he came upon it from outside, from above, as an agent of power and ownership, an enforcer and avenger, the representative of the system which squeezed the lowly by the same iron laws whereby it generation profits for the lucky and strong. — John Updike