Top 14 Debra Ginsberg Quotes
#1. But Allison always finished what she started. It was both a saving grace and a tragic flaw.
Debra Ginsberg
#2. It would almost be easier to have woken up and found that everything about her life was a lie, instead of just this one awful truth.
Debra Ginsberg
#3. In my experience, I've noticed that waiting on tables is one of two things that almost everyone thinks they can do. The other is writing. Perhaps it's no accident that there is only one letter of difference between waiter and writer.
Debra Ginsberg
#4. There is something about the aroma of fresh books that's totally intoxicating. A new book has a certain clean, crisp smell full of promise that is difficult to define. Sort of like the scent and feeling of just-washed bed linens at the moment you slide your legs between them.
Debra Ginsberg
#5. When Dad was a kid, he wanted to be a lumberjack, but unfortunately he'd been cursed with the build of an accountant and the brain of an astrophysicist. These qualities had combined to make him the third-most-visited orthodontist in northern New Jersey.
Kieran Scott
#6. The two chief weapons which parties use in order to ensure success are the public press and the formation of associations.
Alexis De Tocqueville
#7. I've had some of the best times of my life at The KK. The best staff at the greatest college bar in the country!
Chris Chelios
#8. One never really knew what went on inside the hearts of other people, even those hearts you thought you knew as well as your own.
Debra Ginsberg
#9. Music assists him in the use of harmonic and mathematical proportion.
Vitruvius
#10. Like sisters everywhere. With personalities shaped by birth order, we are the keepers of each other's secrets and protectors of each other's childhood memories. We are givers and receivers of female wisdom and are constantly learning from each other.
Debra Ginsberg
#11. These are people whose names are lost to history, but when you have that kind of encounter, somehow you get a whole new perspective on what's of value and how to behave in the face of oppression, and the strength that any single person or a group of people can bring with their own will.
Clara Bingham
#12. A man that steps aside from the world and has leisure to observe it without interest and design, thinks all mankind as mad as they think him.
E. F. L. Wood, 1st Earl Of Halifax
#13. (even though, technically, Karanuk's previous publisher was supposed to get an exclusive
Debra Ginsberg
#14. A teacher must believe in the value and interest of his subject as a doctor believes in health.
Gilbert Highet