“I have a head for business and a body for sin. Unfortunately, the sin appears to be gluttony.”
Jenny Colgan“Christmas, as a practicing Catholic child, was seen as a reward for lots and lots and lots of church.”
Jenny Colgan“The look you get when you’re reading in your van, and your feet are up and you sit so still, and your face is alight, and I don’t know where you are; you could be anywhere, so far away, off in a part of your mind I’ll never get to . . . It drives me crazy. The way you just came here, just got up, changed your entire life . . . I mean, my family’s been here for four generations. It would never have occurred to me to do what you did, just to start over and do something different. Amazing.”
Jenny Colgan, The Bookshop on the Corner“They were probably reading on their tablets,” said Nina loyally. She loved her e-reader, too. “Yes, I know,” said the man. “But I couldn’t see. I couldn’t see what they were reading or ask them if it was good, or make a mental note to look for it later. It was as if suddenly, one day, all the books simply disappeared.”
Jenny Colgan, The Bookshop on the Corner“I have a head for business and a body for sin. Unfortunately, the sin appears to be gluttony.”
Jenny Colgan, Meet Me at the Cupcake Café“Anything that spreads books and brings about more books, I would say it is good. Good medicine, not bad.”
Jenny Colgan, The Little Shop of Happy Ever After“There was a universe inside every human being every bit as big as the universe outside them. Books were the best way Nina knew - apart from, sometimes, music - to breach the barrier; to connect the internal universe with the external, the words acting merely as a conduct between the two worlds.”
Jenny Colgan, The Little Shop of Happy Ever After