Best 9 quotes of Elly Griffiths on MyQuotes

Elly Griffiths

  • By Anonym
    Elly Griffiths

    Does the world really need another long essay on environmental archaeology and freshwater mollusks? Well, it's going to get one, whether it likes it or not.

  • By Anonym
    Elly Griffiths

    He might be living on mice, but Chesterton does not look like an animal who is governed by his appetites. He's an ascetic, if Cathbad ever saw one.

  • By Anonym
    Elly Griffiths

    Nelson is glad to see a handler and her dog coming towards him. The recognises the woman as Jan Adams, famous in Norfolk for having won several medals for bravery. Her dog, a beautiful long-haired German Shepherd is a bit of a celebrity too. What was his name again? "Barney" says Jan in answer to his question. "What's going on?" Nelson explains about the attack. Barney looks at him, head on one side, as if her too might be about to ask a question.

  • By Anonym
    Elly Griffiths

    Peter is suffering from an attack of nostalgia, she knows the symptoms. She mustn't join in otherwise she'll be swept away too, drowning in a quicksand of the past.

  • By Anonym
    Elly Griffiths

    There's a pleasure being mad that only the madman knows.

  • By Anonym
    Elly Griffiths

    What I'm afraid of," says Delilah suddenly in a high, strained voice, "is that one day someone asks me how many children I have and I say four, not five. Because then I'll know that it's over, that she's dead.

  • By Anonym
    Elly Griffiths

    When she bought the cats her mother asked her straight out if they were 'baby substitutes'. 'No,' Ruth had answered, straight-faced. 'They're kittens. If I had a baby it would be a cat substitute.

  • By Anonym
    Elly Griffiths

    You know how thick I am. I don't even eat yoghurt because it's got culture in it.

  • By Anonym
    Elly Griffiths

    You need a break, a complete rest, recharge your batteries.' Recharge your batteries. What the hell does that mean? Nelson prides himself on not needing batteries. He's an old-fashioned, wind-up model.