
Top 15 Books About Common Sayings
#1. Emotions weren't like washing. There was no call to peg them out for all the world to view.
Beryl Bainbridge
#2. When the pace of our feet matched perfectly, I felt a deep inner pang of satisfaction. I could have gone on walking like that forever, side by side with him. There had been few times in my life I had ever inhabited a moment so fully, with no loneliness lurking at the edges.
Lisa Kleypas
#3. Just walk up to your hell & give it a push. Run through it & i'll be waiting on the other side.
Laura Whitcomb
#4. I have always heard that uber-successful people who write books about how to become uber-successful all have one thing in common: They all meditate every day. I consider yoga my meditation.
Kristian Bush
#5. There are three ways by which an individual can get wealth-by work, by gift, and by theft. And, clearly, the reasons why the workers get so little is that the beggars and thieves get so much.
Henry George
#6. Family relationships trigger childhood wounds, and those wounds often trump our rational thinking. We can't 'rationally' transcend the kind of primal pain that such relationships can arouse.
Marianne Williamson
#7. He's definitely one of those men you love before you get to know.
Sarah Strohmeyer
#8. We need a President who is not afraid of complexity, who believes in an open and tolerant society, and who knows that the world can be made new again - and that President is Al Gore.
Caroline Kennedy
#9. Quentin and I were constantly finding something new that we had in common and comic books were one of them. I think we were talking about comic books much earlier in our relationship, before I had the part.
David Carradine
#10. For when one is about to embark on some enterprise, it is precisely the books whose contents have nothing at all in common with the enterprise that are the most useful.
Franz Kafka
#11. Artists are odd," said Mousebones, walking around the man in blue. "Even for humans."
T. Kingfisher
#12. Books for general reading always smell badly. The odor of common people hangs about them.
Friedrich Nietzsche
#13. If you don't know your history, you don't know what you are talking about!
Barbara Ann Mojica
#15. And the poem, I think, is only your voice speaking.
Virginia Woolf
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