Nadine Dorries Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Nadine Dorries. Here they are! All 29 of them:

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Invitation from the Publisher Copyright
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Nadine Dorries (The Four Streets)
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This made her feel guilty, which was the default position for every self-respecting Roman Catholic.
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Nadine Dorries (Ballymara Road (The Four Streets Trilogy))
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eyes. She
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Nadine Dorries (Ruby Flynn)
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ear. But
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Nadine Dorries (Ruby Flynn)
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can’t come, Gerald. What? What shall I tell her? Your
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Nadine Dorries (The Angels of Lovely Lane (Lovely Lane, #1))
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on
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Nadine Dorries (The Children Of Lovely Lane (Lovely Lane #2))
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postulant, maybe?’ she asked eagerly. β€˜Although, sure,
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Nadine Dorries (The Ballymara Road (The Four Streets Trilogy #3))
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you,
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Nadine Dorries (The Ballymara Road (The Four Streets Trilogy #3))
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And of course, [Boris Johnson will] never get questioned like this over at the BBC while the political editor remains a fully paid-up member of the Boris Johnson Admiration Society. So how does he get away with it? Andrew points out that factory resets obviously weren't covered in the technology lessons that Boris Johnson received from Jennifer Arcuri. Again, it's a funny joke. It's a good line, but he was the Prime Minister, and everyone knew he was a liar. Is it all about that guy that rang in when Donald Trump was here. That I always remember saying β€˜but you must know he's lying’. Donald Trump was giving a speech in London about the size of the crowds outside the building he was in. And we had a camera outside the building he was in. We were looking at no crowds. And that simple juxtaposition of rhetorical claim by a politician with observable reality was chilling. It was spine tingling. I can claim that there are huge crowds, huge crowds, the biggest crowds, the greatest crowds outside this building. And I said, β€˜how does it work? How does that happen?’ And someone rang me and said, β€˜I know he's a liar, but it really upsets people like you and Sadiq Khan.’ And at the time I laughed but maybe that's all there is. Maybe your life - and sorry this is going to sound quite rude - but maybe your life is so weird, and your personality is so twisted that you find the frustration of people who care about the truth the closest you ever get to feeling joy. Is that it? Nadine Dorries watches Boris Johnson lie and claims that he's the most trustworthy person on the planet. What is wrong with her? It's not really a question about what's wrong with him; what's wrong with her? Whatever transpires at this inquiry or whatever emerges during these hours of evidence, I can tell you this: there will be a significant number of people who think that Boris Johnson has done nothing wrong or that he is somehow the victim of another witch hunt. You remember? It was a witch hunt when he was caught banged to rights by a parliamentary committee containing a majority of conservatives after even Chris Bryant had stepped down to avoid any accusations or allegations - false allegations – really, of impartiality. And they still called it a witch hunt. It would have been a witch on unless the committee consisted entirely of 14 Nadine Dorries clones. That's the only circumstances in which those people would have claimed that he could receive a fair trial. Where do you even begin today? Do you begin with the 5,000 WhatsApp messages that a man who was in charge of the nuclear code somehow doesn't understand and can't find? I don't know. So, what is your theory now because I don't think I've got one any more. I watch him now, and I feel something very new, very different to what I thought when he was in power because when he was in power there is an urgency to the situation. There is a desperate need to share with the population the awfulness that they apparently can't see. Just now that he's not in power any more, it's almost as if I've allowed the full horror of what he represents to bubble to the surface. It’s now that he can't actually break anything, it's a retrospective reflection upon the abject awfulness of him. I mean the unbelievable awfulness of this man, the things that he's done. You can begin with Brexit. The lies that he's told, the damage that he's done. The contempt in which he holds all the things we're raised to believe are important: rules, obligations, standards, behaviours, fidelity, honesty, kindness, friendship, loyalty, all of these things we teach our children matter. And Boris Johnson teaches us that you can become the most powerful person in the country by treating all of those things with absolute contempt.
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James O'Brien
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Also by Nadine Dorries
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Nadine Dorries (Ruby Flynn)
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you’ve finished.
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Nadine Dorries (The Angels of Lovely Lane (Lovely Lane, #1))
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been Rita’s kitchen.
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Nadine Dorries (The Angels of Lovely Lane (Lovely Lane, #1))
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premise that all sinners were forgiven every indiscretion the
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Nadine Dorries (The Children Of Lovely Lane (Lovely Lane #2))
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I
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Nadine Dorries (The Angels of Lovely Lane (Lovely Lane, #1))
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unusual for them to disagree and when they did, it
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Nadine Dorries (The Mothers of Lovely Lane (Lovely Lane #3))
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another good neighbour they depended on. Emily felt as though Rita were her confidante, her best friend. More than that even, the older sister she had never had. Only a few years older than Emily, but already with a family of her own. Emily’s mother opened her eyes and smiled at Alfred. Emily felt a twinge of jealousy. Her ma and Alfred loved each other so much that Emily often felt excluded by their private exchanges. She dropped back to her knees by the side of the sofa. β€˜Mam, are you all right?’ She was vying for her mother’s attention, dragging her away from Alfred and feeling guilty for it. β€˜Oh, there you are, queen,’ her mother whispered, with a hint of surprise. β€˜I must have known you were home. I’m glad I woke up. Could you just grab the coupons, love, and go down to the shop for me before the kids come home?’ β€˜The kids are already home, love. They’ve gone straight to Rita’s,’ Alfred said, smiling at his wife. Rita’s little sons and their own were inseparable. β€˜They’ll be back soon, queen. She took them straight from school.’ β€˜It’s like we have four little boys, or none at all,’ Emily said, extracting the ration books from the drawer in the wooden kitchen table. β€˜One day we’ll find out which ones are ours,
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Nadine Dorries (The Angels of Lovely Lane (Lovely Lane, #1))
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It’s a fact of life that as we get older, our contribution becomes diminished by those who are younger and have more energy.
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Nadine Dorries (The Children Of Lovely Lane (Lovely Lane #2))
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right without me. She’s been to
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Nadine Dorries (Coming Home to the Four Streets)
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the
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Nadine Dorries (Coming Home to the Four Streets)
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current birth rate in Liverpool, the provision of a maternity unit cannot wait. They are calling it a baby boom apparently, and you have it bad
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Nadine Dorries (The Mothers of Lovely Lane (Lovely Lane #3))
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morning, dressed in their uniform, ready to face the day. Mrs Duffy had instructed them
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Nadine Dorries (The Angels of Lovely Lane (Lovely Lane, #1))
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busy with people getting off the boat, is it? It’s all one-way.’ Bee reached up to take the glass of whiskey Paddy was holding out to her. β€˜I’ll be back,’ she said, but in her mind she was asking herself when. Captain Bob had secured a job as a captain, meeting the cargo ships and piloting them down the Mersey into the port of Liverpool, from where they had waited, out on the bar. He had already travelled to Liverpool and found them a house close to the docks. β€˜It has a kitchen,’ he’d said to Bee. β€˜The range is still there, but it was damaged in the war, and there’s a new gas cooker fitted next to it.’ Bee’s mouth had dropped. β€˜A gas cooker? I have no idea how to use one of those. I’ll be sticking to the fire.’ Bob had just smiled at her indulgently. He understood why the traffic from Dublin was one-way. Bee would soon discover how quickly women who left the west coast of Ireland adapted from the life their ancestors had lived for hundreds of years to all the mod cons England and America had to offer. β€˜Mammy!’ Ciaran shouted from the door. Bob and Bee swivelled round in their chairs as Ciaran came in, followed by Michael, who was carrying Finnbar in his arms and had Mary Kate at his side, holding his hand. β€˜God love you, come here,’ said Bee to Mary Kate, who ran over to her and allowed her to pull her up onto her knee. β€˜I’ve been waiting for you.’ Captain Bob and Michael exchanged
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Nadine Dorries (Shadows in Heaven (Tarabeg #1))
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Tarabeg.’ The scroll declared Tarabeg to be a place where no man would be touched by evil, a place that would be saved as heaven on earth by the protection of the word of St Patrick, who, in the writing on the scroll, said that he had found the people of Tarabeg to be the happiest, the kindest, the most godly and loving that he had met after landing on the shores of the west. That among the druids and heathens he had encountered in other lands, the people of Tarabeg had been the most welcoming of the deeper knowledge of Christ. The scroll was adorned with shamrocks, inked in St Patrick’s own hand. It described Tarabeg as a place where the Holy Ghost was present in every home, residing in its people and lifting them up to a spiritual plane enjoyed by no other community in the land. It finished with the instruction that the scroll must never leave Tarabeg. If it did, the Holy Ghost would leave with it. It must reside within the church built by the people who had converted to Christ and had erected his house near the
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Nadine Dorries (Shadows in Heaven (Tarabeg #1))
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vowed to do what his father had yearned to do. He was still struggling to come to terms with the contents and conditions of the will. He read it every day,
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Nadine Dorries (Mary Kate (Tarabeg #2))
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round this outcrop – a
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Nadine Dorries (Shadows in Heaven (Tarabeg #1))
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The cold and quiet months had arrived as the dark, cloud-heavy skies settled into place. Up a long boreen on the top of the hill at Tarabeg Farm they were ready for the short days and long nights, having worked throughout the summer to ensure there would be enough food and drink to see them through to the other end. β€˜No child who lives on a hard-worked and well-managed farm should ever go hungry,’ said Seamus, in a part of Ireland where children often did just that
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Nadine Dorries (The Velvet Ribbon (Tarabeg #3))
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England, though ’tis not used so much here in Ireland
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Nadine Dorries (Ruby Flynn)
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I will
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Nadine Dorries (Christmas Angels (Lovely Lane #4))
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on his way from the farmhouse, waved to
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Nadine Dorries (The Velvet Ribbon (Tarabeg #3))