“My job isn't to go around judging people. Priests are meant to teach love and forgiveness. That to me is the essence of being a Christian. And trying to find that love and forgiveness in ourselves and others every day should be a challenge that we want to achieve.”
Rosamund Lupton“...grief is loved turned into an eternal missing. ...It can't be contained in hours or days or minutes.”
Rosamund Lupton, Sister“The gastliness of nothing. Because I was nobody's sister now.”
Rosamund Lupton, Sister“However hard and however long we love someone who has died, they can never love us back. At least that is how it feels...”
Rosamund Lupton, Sister“I wanted to make him understand that we shared the details of our lives, because they were the threads that braided us so closely together. And you would have been certain to tell me about a Sabatier knife, because it would have had the rare value of being a detail in your life which tied directly into mine - Bee in Sister”
Rosamund Lupton“I don't believe outstandingly beautiful and charismatic women create obsession in what would otherwise be normal men, but rather they attract the weirdos and the stalkers; flames in the darkness that these disturbing people inhabit, unwittingly drawing them closer until they extinguish the very flame they were drawn to.”
Rosamund Lupton, Sister“But, astonishingly, I'm not broken. I'm not destroyed. Terrified witless, shaking, retching with fear, yes. But no longer insecure. Because during my search for how you died, I somehow found myself to be a different person. ... Living my life. And it wouldn't be my grief for you that toppled the mountain, but love.”
Rosamund Lupton, Sister“I get up and pace the room, as if I can leave my guilt behind me. But it tracks me as I walk, an ugly shadow made by myself.”
Rosamund Lupton, Sister“But my lazy lack of faith, my in-vogue atheism, has taken away the safety net hanging beneath our children's lives.”
Rosamund Lupton, Afterwards“And imagine acquiring a new language and only learning the words to describe a wonderful world, refusing to know the words for a bleak one and in doing so linguistically shaping the world that you inhabit.”
Rosamund Lupton, Sister