Kennedy Davenport Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Kennedy Davenport. Here they are! All 11 of them:

Entendi.” Garrett assente algumas vezes. “Só que a vida é mais do que hóquei, Davenport.” Ele olha para a namorada ao dizer isso. Hannah é tudo pra ele. Não tenho dúvida de que ele abriria mão de tudo por ela, até da carreira promissora.
Elle Kennedy (The Play (Briar U, #3))
Loretta found Phyllis’s bigotry far more shameful than the long-needed changes sweeping the nation.
Paulette Kennedy (The Devil and Mrs. Davenport)
Loretta loved libraries as much as she loved schools. Places of learning were her favorite kind of church—made sacred by the knowledge within their walls.
Paulette Kennedy (The Devil and Mrs. Davenport)
Loretta hated it when people commented on her fluctuating figure—as if her body had value only when it was diminishing.
Paulette Kennedy (The Devil and Mrs. Davenport)
I hadn’t been a Davenport in a very long time – not since the day my father called me a faggot and gave me five minutes to pack my shit and get out. I’d only been fourteen at the time
Sloane Kennedy (A Family Chosen: Volume 1 (The Protectors and Barrettis #1))
She’d do her best to stay quiet and small. The way he liked her.
Paulette Kennedy (The Devil and Mrs. Davenport)
His eyes held a haunted, vacant look that she recognized. It was the same look that met her every time she saw her own reflection in a mirror. Numbness. Hopelessness. A tired, resolved acceptance that this was her life. And nothing would ever get better.
Paulette Kennedy (The Devil and Mrs. Davenport)
Sometimes, if a spirit doesn’t feel heard by the medium, they begin acting out in other ways. Poltergeist activity, scary manifestations. A bit like a child throwing a tantrum.
Paulette Kennedy (The Devil and Mrs. Davenport)
Team Graham’s first line features Beau Di Laurentis. Team Connelly lucked out with Jake’s son AJ and Gray Davenport on the same line.
Elle Kennedy (The Dixon Rule (Campus Diaries, #2))
My hope, dear reader, is that you will examine Loretta’s story, measure it against today’s issues, and come to your own conclusions. Whether you are a person of faith or not, violence and a general lack of understanding, undercut by fear, are as rife today as they were in the 1950s and ’60s, during the Civil Rights Movement and Women’s Rights Movement. With new draconian laws and policies targeting women, minorities, and those of us in the LGBTQ+ community being established almost daily, it takes all of us who are willing to listen and take action to make a difference. The biggest threat to liberty is our own hypocrisy and indifference. Thank you so much for reading.
Paulette Kennedy (The Devil and Mrs. Davenport)
People often assumed smiles meant happiness. But smiles could be masks, too. Better than any made of plastic or paper.
Paulette Kennedy (The Devil and Mrs. Davenport)