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Misadventures Book Quotes & Sayings

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Top Misadventures Book Quotes

Misadventures Book Quotes By Lynsey Addario

With photography, I always think that it's not good enough. — Lynsey Addario

Misadventures Book Quotes By Matshona Dhliwayo

The sun only melts butter; love melts the heart. — Matshona Dhliwayo

Misadventures Book Quotes By Kris Kidd

Every ghost has a story. Monsters are nothing without mythology. — Kris Kidd

Misadventures Book Quotes By Carian Cole

Do I make you happy, though?
I don't mean just sex, I mean, like everything?"
"You've redefined happy for me. — Carian Cole

Misadventures Book Quotes By Ray Bradbury

You don't have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them. — Ray Bradbury

Misadventures Book Quotes By Robert J. Wiersema

Nostalgia is, by its very nature, bittersweet, the happiest memories laced with melancholy. It's that combination, that opposition of forces, that makes it so compelling. People, places, events, times: we miss them, and there's a pleasure in the missing and a sadness in the love.
The feeling is most acute, sometimes cripplingly so, when we find ourselves longing for the moment we're in, the people we're actually with.
That nameless feeling, that sense of excruciating beauty, of pained happiness, is at the core of 4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy). — Robert J. Wiersema

Misadventures Book Quotes By John J. Ross

and thought to tart it up with a few Shakespeare quotations, having a vague recollection from my undergraduate days that the Bard was fond of joking about the great pox. I dusted off my battered copy of the Riverside Shakespeare and started leafing through it. Holy crap, I thought, there is a lot of stuff here on syphilis. My curiosity was piqued, and I did some more digging. Was there a connection between Shakespeare's syphilitic obsession, contemporary gossip about his sexual misadventures, and the only medical fact known about him with certainty - that his handwriting became tremulous in late middle age? I wrote an article that appeared in Clinical Infectious Diseases, supposing it to be of scant interest beyond its immediate specialty audience. To my surprise, it generated a fair amount of Internet buzz, and inspired a segment on The Daily Show. I began to think that there might be interest in a book on the topic of writers and disease, written from a medical perspective. — John J. Ross