The Bookstore Sisters Quotes

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A writer is, after all, only half his book. The other half is the reader and from the reader the writer learns.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
Oh, you're moonlight," he'd said. "Harder to see, but there for those who look.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
She was remembering everything. How love could change a person, how it could cause you the greatest sorrow or shelter you from harm.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
I stay back, because if i get close I'll have to roll him over and look in his eyes, and what if they're empty like Alina's were ? Then I'll know he's gone, like I knew she was gone, too far beyond my reach to ever hear my voice again, to hear me say, I'm sorry, Alina. I wish I'd called more often; I wish I'd heard the truth beneath our vapid sister talk; I wish I'd come to Dublin and fought beside you, or raged at you, because you were acting from fear, too, Alina, not hope at all, or you would have trusted me to help you. Or maybe just apologize, Barrons, for being too young to have my priorities reffined, like you, because I haven't suffered whatever the hell it is you suffered, and then shove you up against a wall and kiss you until you can't breathe, do what I wanted to do the first day I saw you there in your bloody damned bookstore. Disturb you like you disturbed me, make you see me, make you want me-pink me!-shatter your self-control, bring you crashing to your knees in front of me, even though I told myself I'd never want a man like you, that you were too old, too carnal, more animal than man, with one foot in the swamp and no desire to come all the way out, when the truth was that I was terrified by what you made me feel.
Karen Marie Moning (Shadowfever (Fever, #5))
Isabel remembered what books had meant to her so long ago, and she suddenly had a longing for all those fictional worlds that had helped her through the worst years of her life.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
-NONREADING- Bookstores don't provide a remote control for Proust, you can't switch to a soccer match, or a quiz show, win a Cadillac. We live longer but less precisely and in shorter sentences. We travel faster, farther, more often, but bring back slides instead of memories. Here I am with some guy. There I guess that's my ex. Here everyone's naked so this must be a beach. Seven volumes—mercy. Couldn't it be cut or summarized, or better yet put into pictures. There was that series called "The Doll," but my sister-in-law says that's some other P.* And by the way, who was he anyway. They say he wrote in bed for years on end. Page after page at a snail's pace. But we're still going in fifth gear and, knock on wood, never better.
Wisława Szymborska
The author P. L. Travers once said, ‘A writer is, after all, only half his book. The other half is the reader and from the reader the writer learns.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
Maybe you’ll both be who you always were if you’re given time.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
She was good at forgetting; she had practiced for years, and it was now a skill at which she excelled.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
Two, it seemed, could not live nearly as cheaply as one, especially if that one had been accustomed to subsisting on whatever fell to hand, spending what little money he did have in secondhand bookstores.
William Gay (Little Sister Death)
If you walk a mile in my shoes, you’ll end up at a bookstore.
Becky Wade (Sweet on You (A Bradford Sisters Romance, #3))
A lot of people don’t know what to do about grief. I don’t blame you for a thing.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
I want you to remember our last day. I read you a story about two sisters who could find their way through the woods even if it was dark.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
Just like you still think you’ll be happier if you run away.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
Tuesdays were meant for accidents, disappointments, and bad news. Long ago, the day was considered to belong to Mars, the god of war and blood. Now it just meant trouble—it meant that your past could come back to haunt you.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
Never Get Lost Oatmeal Cookies, great for hikes or adventures. Orange You Glad Cake, an orange loaf with buttercream icing, certain to cheer up the day. Sin No More Cinnamon Rolls, delicious and sticky, good for both the well behaved and the unruly.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
I took her to my favorite bookstore, where I loaded her up with Ian Rankin novels and she bullied me into buying a book on European snails. I took her to the chip shop on the corner, where she distracted me by giving a detailed-and-probably-bullshit account of her brother's sex life (drones, cameras, his rooftop pool) while she ate all my fried fish and left her own plate untouched. I took her for a walk along the Thames, where I showed her how to skip a stone and she nearly punctured a hole in a passing pontoon boat. We went to my favorite curry place. Twice. In one day. She'd gotten this look on her face when she took her first bite of their pakora, this blissful lids-lowered look, and two hours later I decided that it made up for the embarrassment I felt that night, when I found her instructing my sister, Shelby on the best way to bleach out bloodstains, using the curry dribble on my shirt as a test case. In short, it was both the best three days I'd ever had, my mother notwithstanding, and a fairly standard week with Charlotte Holmes.
Brittany Cavallaro (The Last of August (Charlotte Holmes, #2))
Exhibit D: The Cots (or, If You Give a Librarian a Closet) If you give a librarian a closet, she will probably fill it with junk. If she fills it with junk, some of the junk will be books in need of repair. If some of the junk is books, and the closet is off of a back room anyway, she will hide more books there, books that she thinks are crap like the Stormy Sisters series, but which her boss thinks the library should keep. If she hides crappy books there, she will be in no rush to clean the closet, since she would then be out a hiding place. If she goes ten months without cleaning it, she will go to great lengths to hide the mess from her alcoholic and temperamental boss. If she wants to hide the mess from her boss, she will stuff the front of the closet with cots that were once used for nap hour of the short-lived library day care, circa 1996. If she stuffs the closet with cots… the closet will fester unopened for months. If the closet festers unopened for months, the librarian will probably decorate the closet door with cartoons and posters in an effort to distract her fellow librarians from the thought of ever opening the closet. If a librarian decorates a closet door, she will use such items as a Conan the Librarian cartoon, a large stocker that says “the world is quiet here,” a poster of If You Give a Mouse a Cookie, a CPR chart, and a bookstore café napkin signed by Michael Chabon. If she uses these items, her boss will ask, “What the hell does this mean, ‘The world is quiet here’? Is it political?” And her boss will also ask, “you’re not filing Michael Chabon in the children’s section, are you?” but her boss, distracted by these items, will never think to open the door. If her boss never opens the door, she will forget she has given the librarian a closet and will, by the end of the year, offer the librarian a second closet. If she gives the librarian a second closet, the librarian will probably fill it with junk.
Rebecca Makkai (The Borrower)
For a while, neither [Midori] nor her sister could get used to apartment life – because it was too easy, she said. They had always been used to running around like crazy every day, taking care of sick people, helping out at the bookstore, and one thing or another. "We're finally getting used to it, though," she said. "This is the way we should have been living all along – not having to worry about anyone else's needs, just stretching out any way we felt like it. It made us both nervous at first, like our bodies were floating a couple of inches off the floor. It didn't seem real, like real life couldn't really be like that. We were both tense, like everything was gonna get tipped upside down any minute." "A couple of worrywarts," I said with a smile. "Well, it's just that life has been too cruel to us till now," Midori said. "But that's O.K. We're gonna get back everything it owes us.
Haruki Murakami (Norwegian Wood)
How Much Do I Love You? I love you more than pancakes, more than ice cream, more than pickles, more than my life. I love you more than dogs or cats or diamonds or gold, more than anyone else in the world. I loved brushing your hair every night and walking you to school. I told you every story you knew. I want you to remember our last day. I read you a story about two sisters who could find their way through the woods even if it was dark. I want you to remember the last evening we had. We drank tea made of roses. We baked a peach pie. We had spaghetti with butter for supper. We looked at the stars with your father, sitting high up on the roof, and then I took you inside. I kissed you both good night. I hope you remember everything. Someday you will find this and you’ll know that to the very end I thought about you. There is no ending to that. You still hold my heart in your hands. I loved you girls more than a fish loves a river, more than a bird loves the sky. Remember that. Remember me.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
Yorick's Used and Rare Books had a small storefront on Channing but a deep interior shaded by tall bookcases crammed with history, poetry, theology, antiquated anthologies. There was no open wall space to hang the framed prints for sale, so Hogarth's scenes of lust, pride, and debauchery leaned rakishly against piles of novels, folk tales, and literary theory. In the back room these piles were so tall and dusty that they took on a geological air, rising like stalagmites. Jess often felt her workplace was a secret mine or quarry where she could pry crystals from crevices and sweep precious jewels straight off the floor. As she tended crowded shelves, she opened one volume and then another, turning pages on the history of gardens, perusing Edna St. Vincent Millay: "We were very tired, were very merry, / We had gone back and forth all night on the ferry..." dipping into Gibbon: "The decline of Rome was the natural and inevitable effect of immoderate greatness. Prosperity ripened the principle of decay..." and old translations of Grimm's Fairy Tales: "They walked the whole day over meadows, fields, and stony places. And when it rained, the little sister said, 'Heaven and our hearts are weeping together...
Allegra Goodman (The Cookbook Collector)
disparity between Louie and Woody is most pronounced. In Woody Allen comedies, the Woody protagonist or surrogate takes it upon himself to tutor the young women in his wayward orbit and furnish their cultural education, telling them which books to read (in Annie Hall’s bookstore scene, Allen’s Alvy wants Annie to occupy her mind with Death and Western Thought and The Denial of Death—“You know, instead of that cat book”), which classic films to imbibe at the revival houses back when Manhattan still had a rich cluster of them. In Crimes and Misdemeanors, it’s a 14-year-old female niece who dresses like a junior-miss version of Annie Hall whom Woody’s Clifford squires to afternoon showings at the finer flea pits, advising her to play deaf for the remaining years of her formal schooling. “Don’t listen to what your teachers tell ya, you know. Don’t pay attention. Just, just see what they look like, and that’s how you’ll know what life is really gonna be like.” A more dubious nugget of avuncular wisdom would be hard to imagine, and it isn’t just the Woody stand-in who does the uncle-daddy-mentor-knows-best bit for the benefit of receptive minds in ripe containers. In Hannah and Her Sisters, Max von Sydow’s dour painter-philosophe Frederick is the Old World “mansplainer” of all time, holding court in a SoHo loft which he shares with his lover, Lee, played by Barbara Hershey, whose sweaters abound with abundance. When Lee groans with enough-already exasperation when Frederick begins droning on about an Auschwitz documentary—“You missed a very dull TV show on Auschwitz.
James Wolcott (King Louie (Kindle Single))
but promise can disappear if you leave it to flounder,
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
don’t read. It’s a waste of time. It’s just for people who want to escape real life.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
Tuesdays were meant for accidents, disappointments, and bad news.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
Oh, you’re moonlight, he’d said. Harder to see, but there for those who look.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
I don't think I'm the smart sister," Isabel said. "You are," Sophie told her. "You just have a lot to learn.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
I knew from experience that my sensitivity to what scripture calls "powers and principalities" was stronger some days than others. As I biked through downtown (Cochabamba, Bolivia), I saw groups of young men loitering on the street corners waiting for the next movie to start. I stopped and walked through a bookstore stacked with magazines depicting violence, sex, and gossip, endless forms of provocative advertisement and unnecessary articles imported from other parts of the world. I had the dark feeling of being surrounded by powers much greater than myself and felt the seductive allure of sin all around me. I got a glimpse of the evil behind all the horrendous realities that plague our world-extreme hunger, nuclear weapons, torture, exploitation, rape, child abuse, and various forms of oppression-and how they all have their small and sometimes unnoticed beginnings in the human heart. The demon is patient in the way it seeks to devour and destroy the work of God. I felt intensely the darkness of the world around me. After a period of aimless wandering, I biked to a small Carmelite convent close to the house of my hosts. A very friendly Carmelite sister spoke to me and invited me into the chapel to pray. She radiated joy, peace, and yes, light. She told me about the light that shines into the darkness without saying a word about it. As I looked around, I saw the images of Teresa of Avila and Therese of Liseaux, two sisters who taught in their own times that God speaks in subtle ways and that peace and certainty follow when we hear well. Suddenly, it seemed to me that these two saints were talking to me about another world, another life, another love. As I knelt down in the small and simple chapel, I knew that this place was filled with God's presence. Because of the prayers offered there day and night, the chapel was filled with light, and the spirit of darkness had not gotten a foothold there. My visit to the Carmelite convent helped me realize again that where evil seems to hold sway, God is not far away, and where God shows his presence, evil may not remain absent for very long. There always remains a choice to be made between the creative power of love and life and the destructive power of hatred and death. I, too, must make that choice myself, again and again. Nobody else, not even God, will make that choice for me.
Henri J.M. Nouwen
words that have been said cannot be unspoken,
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
It’s just for people who want to escape real life.” Isabel remembered what books had meant to her so long ago, and she suddenly had a longing for all those fictional worlds that had helped her through the worst years of her life.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
She could even forget that she had once been considered the girl most likely to become somebody, when she’d turned out to be nobody in particular.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
How Much Do I Love You? I love you more than pancakes, more than ice cream, more than pickles, more than my life. I love you more than dogs or cats or diamonds or gold, more than anyone else in the world. I loved brushing your hair every night and walking you to school. I told you every story you knew.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
How Much Do I Love You? I love you more than pancakes, more than ice cream, more than pickles, more than my life. I love you more than dogs or cats or diamonds or gold, more than anyone else in the world. I loved brushing your hair every night and walking you to school. I told you every story you knew. I want you to remember our last day. I read you a story about two sisters who could find their way through the woods even if it was dark. I want you to remember the last evening we had. We drank tea made of roses. We baked a peach pie. We had spaghetti with butter for supper. We looked at the stars with your father, sitting high up on the roof, and then I took you inside. I kissed you both good night. I hope you remember everything. Someday you will find this and you’ll know that to the very end I thought about you. There is no ending to that. You still hold my heart in your hands. I loved you girls more than a fish loves a river, more than a bird loves the sky. Remember that. Remember me. When
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
P. L. Travers once said, ‘A writer is, after all, only half his book. The other half is the reader and from the reader the writer learns.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
I can do all things through Christ, who strengthens me.
Hope Holloway (The Bookstore on Amelia Island (Seven Sisters Book 3))
Time goes faster than you think.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
That was the moment the woman broke down in tears and confessed that it was the anniversary of her son’s death, and she’d been desperate to escape the day by losing herself in a good book. Janet had driven the woman home via the bookstore, where she’d purchased for the woman not only the one she’d reserved, but also several others.
Sally Hepworth (The Good Sister)
Stop acting like you know me,” Isabel said. “Well, you for sure do not know me. I’m not the person I used to be,” Johnny said. “We’re always the people we used to be,” Isabel said.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
How love could change a person, how it could cause you the greatest sorrow or shelter you from harm.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
I don’t read. It’s a waste of time. It’s just for people who want to escape real life.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
If you do, I’ll forgive you all over again,” Sophie assured her. “We can fight and still love each other. That’s what sisters do.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Wedding (The Once Upon a Time Bookshop, #2))
Violet shrugged. “Finished. I read all seven. He should have written more.” “Well, there are eight Mary Poppins books, so they should keep you busy for a while. The author P. L. Travers once said, ‘A writer is, after all, only half his book. The other half is the reader and from the reader the writer learns.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
Someday you will find this and you’ll know that to the very end I thought about you. There is no ending to that. You still hold my heart in your hands. I loved you girls more than a fish loves a river, more than a bird loves the sky. Remember that. Remember me.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
I don’t think I’m the smart sister,” Isabel said. “You are,” Sophie told her. “You just have a lot to learn.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
She was thinking about the way a fish loved a river, and a bird loved the sky, and a mother loved her daughters. She was remembering everything. How love could change a person, how it could cause you the greatest sorrow or shelter you from harm. There were moths hitting against the windowpanes. A night heron called in the marshland as if its heart were breaking.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)
When Ferlinghetti left Paris and headed to San Francisco, he, too, opened a bookstore, the famous City Lights, which to this day remains the sister bookstore of Shakespeare and Company.
Jeremy Mercer (Time Was Soft There: A Paris Sojourn at Shakespeare & Co.)
That manuscript, Barbed, will find its way to bookstores in Fall of 2021.
Deborah J. Ledford (SoWest: Love Kills (Sisters in Crime Desert Sleuths Chapter Anthology Book 9))
At first each bookstore felt magical. Not the kind of magic Esther had grown up with but the kind she'd read about in novels, the kind that was all possibility, the chance that with one right turn in the forest or one fate- ful conversation with an old woman a person's life might change forever. She would enter a store and take in the march of spines lined up on the shelves, the dust motes glittering in the sun, the mouthwatering smell of paper and cardboard and glue and words, and think, this is it. Every time. It never was.
Emma Törzs (Ink Blood Sister Scribe)
It was a warm summer day. Cam Jansen, her friend Eric Shelton, and Eric’s twin sisters, Donna and Diane, were waiting in a long line outside Lee’s Bookstore. They were all waiting to meet Poochie, the famous television dog. Cam pointed to a sign in the front window of the store. “It says that Poochie will be here at noon.” “That’s ten more minutes,” Eric said. Cam looked through the bookstore window. Inside there was a large table. Piled on one side of the table were books. On the other side there was a large photograph of Poochie and a sign that said: Buy The Poochie Story the new best-selling book by the star of the television program Hero Dog.
David A. Adler (Cam Jansen and the Mystery of the Television Dog (Cam Jansen Mysteries, #4))
Then he asks when my poetry book will be out, and it’s like he’s bringing up a wart or goiter I’ve secretly had taken off, since the book came out two years ago, with grossly underwhelming response. Even I barely noticed, being stuck in the muddy trench of Dev’s sleepless infancy when the box hit the porch. Tearing it open, I’d lifted a copy, thumbed it, and tried to tell myself it was some worthy stone added to poetry’s great mountain. But I hid it out of eyeshot in my study—the sight of it made me sick. First books rarely get the attention they deserve, the other poet says with a kind look. I explain that virtually all copies sold were, I’m guessing, bought by my sister, who gave twenty or thirty for Christmas that year. He tells me the story of a writer who—on finding his own first book remaindered in a used bookstore—opened to the flyleaf only to discover his own signature above the note To Mum and Dad….
Mary Karr (Lit)
writer is, after all, only half his book. The other half is the reader and from the reader the writer learns.
Alice Hoffman (The Bookstore Sisters)