Best 11 quotes of Maile Meloy on MyQuotes

Maile Meloy

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    Maile Meloy

    At the simplicity of the gesture, he felt a pang: the raw nerve of his loneliness exposed.

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    Maile Meloy

    Diabetes is passed that way -- over and down, like a knight in chess.

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    Maile Meloy

    His heart felt dangerously full, for the first time in years. That dried-up battered organ, suddenly flush with love. It could kill him.

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    Maile Meloy

    I settled in with The Uninvited Guests thinking I knew what kind of Edwardian pleasures were in store: the fraught dinner party in an endangered, rambling house, the feuding family, the rich suitor, the disruptive visitors. The novel has all of those delightful things, but it also defied every one of my expectations. I saw none of it coming. I read it in one breathless sitting, and finished wanting to give it to everyone I know.

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    Maile Meloy

    The force with which he wanted it both ways made him grit his teeth. What kind of fool wanted it only one way?

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    Maile Meloy

    The role of the human brain was to rationalize suffering.

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    Maile Meloy

    To be a kid is to be invisible and to listen, and to interpret things that aren't necessarily meant for you to hear--because how else do you find out about the world?

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    Maile Meloy

    When they started to drain a swamp where birds and fish had lived, for a new housing development down the road from his apartment, Steven watched the protests and the preparations with interest. The bird people were furious, the developers unmovable, and Steven was filled with relief that the fight wasn't his. Nothing here was his... He thought there should have been something sad about how little he was tied up with the place, but instead it felt like freedom. He was free because it wasn't his water here, and they weren't his fish.

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    Maile Meloy

    It takes experience to know what is a catastrophe (Richard Hughes, 'A High Wind in Jamaica'),

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    Maile Meloy

    She craved a family, not having had enough of one to understand what a pain in the ass it was.

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    Maile Meloy

    We have to think of a question that we wouldn't otherwise want to answer.' He stood over the pot, looking down at the leaves. 'Something like, Who do you fancy?' 'That might work,' I said, even though it was the last question I wanted to answer. But it was impossible, suddenly, to tell a lie. Benjamin took a deep sniff over the steam and turned to me. 'All right,' he said. 'So who do you fancy?' I hesitated. 'Fancy means like, right?' I said stalling. 'Of course.' I gritted my teeth against the answer coming out. but I couldn't stop myself. 'You,' I said helplessly.