Top 15 Tiandra Gayle Quotes
#1. I won't forget, he whispered, and I swallowed the lump in my throat.
Julie Kagawa
#2. Some of the longest home runs I've hit, I didn't actually realize they were going that far. Everyone says, 'What does it feel like to hit the ball that far?' Actually, there's no feeling at all. I know when the ball meets the bat whether or not it's left the park. It's a nice easy thing.
Mark McGwire
#3. If he has a last thought, if there is time for a last thought, it will simply be, So this is what a last thought is like.
J.M. Coetzee
#5. If timing is everything, then I have nothing.
Gary Patella
#6. I think sometimes my humor is extremely dry, and a lot of times I would say things that I thought were very funny but ... I have a reputation of - people think of me as a very fundamentalist, humorless fellow.
Ian MacKaye
#7. This is the wonder of names. Like the press of a footprint in the snow: proof that someone has been there.
Aislinn Hunter
#8. We are an impossibility in an impossible universe.
Ray Bradbury
#9. These days it seemed like the words between them were there only to outline the silences.
Jodi Picoult
#10. Above all, the only thing you have to heal is the present thought. Get that right and the whole picture will change into one of harmony and joy.
Eckhart Tolle
#11. Mental energy is powerful. Direct its strength towards our positive aspirations rather than empowering unsubstantiated fears.
Andi Jones
#12. The record of the rocks contains very little, other than bacteria and one-celled plants until, about a billion years ago, after some three billion years of invisible progress, a major breakthrough occurred. The first many-celled creatures appeared on earth.
Robert Jastrow
#13. People want to spend time together and I just couldn't pretend that I wanted to do that. But now I do get it. [..] Though I still don't do that.
Laura Marling
#14. A soft breeze plays with her hair, bringing with it the mingling scent of dusty tomes and damp, rich ink.
Erin Morgenstern
#15. You see, the interesting thing about books, as opposed, say, to films, is that it's always just one person encountering the book, it's not an audience, it's one to one.
Paul Auster
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