Top 14 Cahier Journal Quotes
#1. If the Church has no the authority to tell its members that they may not engage in homosexual practices, then it has no authority at all. And if we accept the argument of the hypocrites of homosexuality that their sin is not a sin, we have destroyed ourselves.
Orson Scott Card
#2. She thought about her cousins in Oklahoma, which was odd, since she'd never spent much time with them. She didn't even know them very well. Now she was sorry about that.
Rick Riordan
#3. In Charleston, temperance is a four letter word.
Mark R. Jones
#5. Having your second child, in case you were wondering, is a lot harder than having your first, except for those people who find it easier. I'm afraid I don't have the latest figures to confirm this.
Rachel Cusk
#6. I hope that you are a disaster. I'm sorry, but I do. I hope that you are thunder and lightning. I hope you are a forest fire, I hope you kill the dead wood and burn off the rotting leaves. With the canopy gone, the sun can get in. You need new growth. I hope you're terrible and broken and perfect.
Joey Comeau
#7. So far we still don't know whether angels are ethereal beings of light without substance or if they take a solid human form with real wings which actually enable them to fly.
Malcolm Godwin
#8. Hair like steel wool grew far back on his head and gave him a domed brown forehead that might at careless glance seemed a dwelling place for brains.
Raymond Chandler
#9. Charles Blow's memoir 'Fire Shut Up in My Bones' was a breathtaking piece of writing.
Andrew Rosenthal
#10. It was right then and there that she'd realized there was no quota on misery for people, no quantifiable threshold that once reached, got you miraculously taken out of the distress pool.
J.R. Ward
#11. Sometimes religion can be the greatest roadblock to true spirituality. The
Ravi Zacharias
#12. It's tough to get out of bed to do roadwork at 5 am when you've been sleeping in silk pajamas
Marvin Hagler
#13. I was born and have ever remaind [sic] in the most humble walks of life.
Abraham Lincoln
#14. How we face death is at least as important as how we face life.
Ken L. Gould
Famous Authors
Popular Topics
Scroll to Top