Top 15 Quotes About Norwegian Love
#1. I don't care what you say about me if I don't find you physically attractive.
Amanda Bynes
#2. I may not be much good at most things, but if I didn't have the pleasure of planning and installing shows, and doing it better than anyone else, I would have stopped buying art many years ago.
Charles Saatchi
#3. I miss her every now and then, but finally, she didn't move me. I don't know, sometimes I think I've got this hard kernel in my heart, and nothing much can get inside it.
Haruki Murakami
#4. You want to know why you felt that way about me even though you didn't love me.
Haruki Murakami
#5. Few of us can easily surrender our belief that society must somehow make sense. The thought that the State has lost its mind and is punishing so many innocent people is intolerable. And so the evidence has to be internally denied.
Arthur Miller
#6. Faith is a kind of knowing; it is different from hope. My faith is that life is purposeful; of that I'm sure. There is a God, there is intelligence, there is consciousness. And behind all of this, there is incredible compassion.
John Denver
#7. End of work arguments became increasingly popular in the late seventies and early eighties, as radical thinkers pondered what would happen to traditional working-class struggle once there was no longer a working class. (The answer: it would turn into identity politics.)
David Graeber
#8. Everybody feels like that to some extent," I said. "They're trying to express themselves and it bothers them when they can't get it right.
Haruki Murakami
#9. The great Danish-Norwegian author Aksel Sandemose once said, liberally translated, the only things worth writing about are love and murder.
Henning Mankell
#11. I love you," I said to her. "From the bottom of my heart. I don't ever want to let you go again. But there's nothing I can do. I can't make a move."
"Because of her?"
I nodded.
Haruki Murakami
#12. What a terrible thing it is to wound someone you really care for and to do it so unconsciously.
Haruki Murakami
#13. So after he died, I didn't know how to relate to other people. I didn't know what it means to love another person.
Haruki Murakami
#14. We don't call them inmates,' Molly said, quoting one of the psychiatrists.'We call them patients.
Dean Koontz
#15. I was at that age, that time of life when every sight, every feeling, every thought came back, like a boomerang, to me. And worse, I was in love.
Haruki Murakami
Famous Authors
Popular Topics
Scroll to Top