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Marisol Quotes

Quotes tagged as "marisol" Showing 1-6 of 6
J.R. Ward
“Is he Catholic?" her grandmother asked on the way out.

He's a drug dealer -- so if he is religious, he's got incredible powers of reconciliation.

"He looks like a good boy," her vovo said over her shoulder. "A good Catholic boy." And that was that -- for now.”
J.R. Ward, Lover at Last

Katherine Applegate
“I like not knowing everything. It makes things more interesting.”
Katherine Applegate, Crenshaw

J.R. Ward
“Ehric frowned as he peeled a Post-It note off the package. "Preheat to three seventy-five." His brother went to the wall ovens and began pushing buttons. "Convection?"
"Doesn't say."
"Damn it."

Under and other circumstances, Assail would have found it impossible to believe that Ecale was wasting his meager urge to speak on cooking. But Marisol and her grandmother had changed everything ... for the short time they had been here.”
J. R. Ward

Stephanie Garber
“... a robust pop sounded and a tiny pepper black dragon about the size of a chipmunk shot out streams of red fire to sear a fish stick at a nearby stall.

On the docks, the adorable little beasts appeared to be as common as squirrels. Almost every vendor had one. Marisol was clearly not fond of the small winged creatures but Evangeline was delighted to spy tiny blue dragons sitting on shoulders and leathery brown ones perched on carts. The miniature beasts roasted apples and meats, blew glass baubles, and heated earthen mugs of drinking chocolate.”
Stephanie Garber, Once Upon a Broken Heart

Stephanie Garber
“Did you ever play that game as a child- the one where there's a circle of chairs, and when the music stops playing you have to find a chair to sit in? But there's never enough chairs for everyone, so one person is always left without a seat in the circle and then tossed out of the game. That's how I feel, as if I missed my chance at a chair and now I've been tossed out of the game.”
Stephanie Garber, Once Upon a Broken Heart

Stephanie Garber
“... you're more likely to get blamed for it if you don't make an appearance. It's easy to villainize a shadow...”
Stephanie Garber, Once Upon a Broken Heart