Magnolia 1999 Quotes & Sayings
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Top Magnolia 1999 Quotes

That we must all die, we always knew; I wish I had remembered it sooner. — Samuel Johnson

HLADE'S LAW:
If you have a difficult task give it to a lazy man - he will find an easier way to do it. — Arthur Bloch

He had always loved God. In his darkest hours he cried out, God did not create us to abandon us. — Irving Stone

Interview on The Skiffy and Fanty Show 2010. In response to query that young adults may not be open to the nuances/realism in Moorehawke:
'(In fact)young adult readers seem to (be very inclined)to reading the (Moorehawke) books thematically. Some (not all) adult reviewers ... tend to be very plot oriented. Because the books are a slow release of information and very character driven ... (they) don't reward impatient reading ... but young adults seem to be very patient readers. They're very analytical as well. I get very analytical responses from my young adult readers. — Celine Kiernan

Why can I remember eggplant, when I can't remember my own name?! — Carla Cassidy

An emergency stash of Thin Mints. Frickin' Girl Scouts. Those things were way to addictive. They had to be laced with crack. Charlie Davidson Fourth Grave Beneath my Feet — Darynda Jones

Patrick Stewart was the first internet sex symbol without hair but pileggi always thought it was him. — David Duchovny

He felts as if a tumour had burst inside his skull, — Stephen Lloyd Jones

I hear a lot of talk today about xenophobia. Is it really phobia if you have something to be afraid of? — Bill Maher

realize what you are not doing and dare to do what you are not doing. What distinctive thing are you not doing? — Ernest Agyemang Yeboah

Happiness is often hidden in misery; light appears brighter in darkness. — Debasish Mridha

I don't think leadership demands 'yes' or 'no' answers; I think leadership is providing the forum for making the right decision, which doesn't demand unanimity. — Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr.

Although one may direct the future or past through the onerous linkages of temporal cause and effect, riding the breaking waves of the present and never once overstepping it, the better way is to go there and do it yourself. — Mary-Jean Harris

Enthusiasm is the height of man; it is the passing from the human to the divine. — Ralph Waldo Emerson