
Top 14 Lynice Jones Quotes
#1. While you can't keep fear from visiting, you can slam the door in its face. With God's promise in your hand, that's exactly what you are able to do.
James MacDonald
#2. I'm drawn to New England because that's where my roots are, and I miss it. I come from many generations of New Englanders, and so, in my writing, I've been drawn back there to the landscape and the light and the type of personality that's revealed.
Elizabeth Strout
#3. Ask me nothings as yet. When we have breakfast, then I answer all questions.
Bram Stoker
#4. No matter how many times Percy killed them and watched them crumble to powder, they just kept re-forming like large evil dust bunnies.
Rick Riordan
#5. A place like the meadow in the song I sang to Rue as she died. Where Peeta's child could be safe.
Suzanne Collins
#6. I've imparted that philosophy to the writers, but some of them look stuff up while some don't. Same with the editors, directors and actors. To each their own.
Vince Gilligan
#7. Perhaps the home I am homesick for is still there, after all.
Michael Frayn
#8. Casting the body's vest aside, My soul into the boughs does glide.
Andrew Marvell
#9. Parents of young children are always acting. You act excited to read a story for the five-hundredth time. You act impressed someone went to the bathroom on the toilet. The excitement I show to some of the children's scribbles should get me a Golden Globe nomination.
Jim Gaffigan
#10. I would like to find a stew that will give me heartburn immediately, instead of at three o clock in the morning.
John Barrymore
#11. It is hard to feel safe and comfortable when the only measures for what is safe and comfortable are normative ideas you don't abide by.
Samhita Mukhopadhyay
#12. I, for one, am tired of seeing movies about men damaging each other.
Vera Farmiga
#13. When you've had less than little in some things, you're grateful for even a spoonful of more.
Nora Roberts
#14. All men have a natural fear of making a mistake
by believing too well of a person. However, the error of believing too ill of a person is perhaps not feared, at least not in the same degree as the other.
Soren Kierkegaard
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