Top 15 Trepper Merrik Quotes
#1. Self-help books are for the birds. Self-help groups are where it's at.
Janice Dickinson
#2. Cleland was the victim of his own downfall.
Alan Parry
#3. I make it a point never to argue with people for whose opinion I have no respect.
Edward Gibbon
#4. Now that Iran's actions have been verified, it can begin to receive relief from certain nuclear sanctions and gain access to its own money that had been frozen.
Barack Obama
#5. I feel so pouty. I am just a muggle. A beige bitch muggle.
Tarryn Fisher
#6. Belle hesitated. "What is this place?" she asked.
"A bit of magic, like all good books," the man replied. "An escape. A place where you can leave cares and worries behind." He smiled. "At least for a chapter or two.
Jennifer Donnelly
#7. Betty died of a broken heart. Some people laugh when they hear that phrase, but that's because they don't know anything about the world. People die of broken hearts. It happens every day, and it will go on happening to the end of time.
Paul Auster
#8. Under certain circumstances the fateful decisions in life, sometimes even in matters of life and death, are made with an almost indifferent ease. While the little things-for instance, the way people hang on to what is over-seem so important.
Peter Hoeg
#9. There was nothing, nothing, that compared to that moment.
N.R. Walker
#10. The most precious substance in the universe is the spice Melange ... The spice extends life ... expands consciousness ... gives them the ability to fold space ... that is, travel to any part of the universe without moving.
Frank Herbert
#11. Fine, I just wanted to feel like me again"
"Babe, you were naked"
"Yeah well it worked so get over it
R.S. Burnett
#12. I'm not saying you didn't deserve it, O." Dakota laughed. "But I'm restocking the karma bank and you're at the top of my list.
Carolyn Mackler
#13. Hip is the sophistication of the wise primitive in a giant jungle.
Norman Mailer
#14. Ingratitude is often disproportionate to the benefaction received.
Karl Kraus
#15. It is a matter of perfect indifference where a thing originated; the only question is: Is it true in and for itself?
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel