Enjoy the best quotes of Liane Moriarty. Explore, save & share top quotes by Liane Moriarty.
“Toxic' was actually an accurate description of the feelings Clementine had so often felt in Erika's presence: the intense aggravation she had to work so hard to resist and conceal, the disappointment with herself, because Erika wasn't evil or cruel or stupid, she was simply annoying, and Clementine's response to her annoyingness was so completely disporportionate, it embarassed and confounded her. Erika loved Clementine. She'd do anything for her. So why did she inflame Clementine so? It was like she was allergic to her.”
Liane Moriarty“Toxic' was actually an accurate description of the feelings Clementine had so often felt in Erika's presence: the intense aggravation she had to work so hard to resist and conceal, the disappointment with herself, because Erika wasn't evil or cruel or stupid, she was simply annoying, and Clementine's response to her annoyingness was so completely disporportionate, it embarassed and confounded her. Erika loved Clementine. She'd do anything for her. So why did she inflame Clementine so? It was like she was allergic to her.”
Liane Moriarty, Truly Madly Guilty“A miracle is no less glorious for having previously happened”
Erika Gardner, The Dragon in the Garden“My theory is, if you force yourself to smile enough, then you start to feel it. Which comes in handy all the time.”
Erika Christensen“Green has always been my mom's favorite color. My father, aunt and I have gotten her jade, emerald, and peridot pieces over the years, and we always seem to be on the lookout.”
Erika Christensen“I think part of the beauty of our relationship with jewelry is that it can change and evolve as we do ourselves.”
Erika Christensen“I can be a binger when it comes to information, but most of the time, I'm pretty good, and I try to focus on my own life and personal communication.”
Erika Christensen“Much of the way food has been shaped and formed in prisons is due to the cultural thought about prisoners in general, and how they should be treated by society and by the state. Food in prison is a reflection of culture and cultural thinking about criminal justice and reform.”
Erika Camplin“She was a woman who lived however she wished without care for another, without putting the needs of those around her before her own selfish opinions. We are breeding a nation of such thinkers and individuals--intent on personal expression at all costs--and that will lead to war. I might be more a successful writer if I did not seek to address human truth, but rather spewed out my own limited opinions without care for reader or critic or any kind of propriety.”
Erika Robuck“I need my own armor, and soon. A silly queen I'll look when I've been slowly flattened into a man.”
Erika Johansen