Home > Author > Sara Sheridan
81 " Nothing is long ago in an archive, my dear. In the records we treat the dead as same as the living. that’s the whole point of keeping papers. It doesn’t matter if it’s a hundred years or only a few weeks. It’s all filed away, fresh as the day it went under the covers. "
― Sara Sheridan , British Bulldog (Mirabelle Bevan Mystery, #4)
82 " Didn’t young people care what the generation before them had achieved? And if not, why had everyone gone through those grim difficult wartime years? "
83 " It was nearly ten years since the peace though her memories of the war still felt fresh. "
84 " I'm in my 40s and I'm constantly surprised by how much my childhood still plays a part in my life. "
― Sara Sheridan
85 " Kindness was too painful. It had been a long time since he had had to endure it. "
― Sara Sheridan , Brighton Belle (Mirabelle Bevan Mystery #1)
86 " At length, when I considered it, I realized that the best of my actions were small things. Picking flowers and cooking food for my mother when she had been unwell, spending an afternoon with the children, sending money to my sister or kissing Henry’s tiny head as he slept in the nursery before I left. I thought of every detail and afterwards I felt better. Hellfire and brimstone have never appealed to me and I admit I become easily confused thinking of right and wrong. But I do understand kindness. "
― Sara Sheridan , The Secret Mandarin
87 " The jungle is alive. It’s dangerous as a living nightmare and brimful of hostility. "
― Sara Sheridan , On Starlit Seas
88 " The moon was low but not full. The men set out along the dock in conversation. As they dropped onto the dark beach, Simmons declared, ‘There can be no better place in the world than this.’Henderson had to agree. The beach was beautiful. The stars lit the sand and balmy air rode in as the waves washed up on paradise "
89 " It had occurred to her many times that on board it didn’t matter where you were coming from or where you were heading. Each voyage had its own charisma. Like writing a book – word by word – or crossing a country – step by step – each minute had to be lived moment by moment. "
90 " It was as if she was a dream, like London, which he could not entirely grasp and of which he was not worthy. He wanted to be part of it but had forgotten how. It seemed extraordinary and strange that this paragon among women had condescended to travel on his ship. In fact, she’d insisted upon it. Her presence was at once otherworldly and familiar, none of which explained why his brain ceased to function when he was in her company. "
91 " The smell of roasting meat rose from the street stalls in a sizzle and a fiddle player begged for coin as he rasped a haunting melody. Life could not be more perfect. "
92 " The daily chocolate left Will in high spirits, so that some days he believed he could wheel with the gulls that fished the foaming water close to shore. Now that he felt so free, it came to him that the corner of England, which up till now had been his whole universe, was in fact only a scrap of a boundless realm. "
93 " A journey is an achievement, Maria, just as much as a mathematical proof. "
94 " She enjoyed the sights and sounds of the dockside – ports were places of freedom. "
95 " Her eyes betrayed no shock at the sights of the quay as they unfolded – not the sweating deckhands, the prostitutes crowding the ship, the hubbub of stalls, including one where three slaves were for sale, their ankles manacled. She might as well have been walking through a country garden as she moved inexorably away from the water. "
96 " We might give her presents, tell some tales, but would she ever be able to really understand what the journey had been like for us? "
97 " It seemed to me that these months of watching and listening, second-guessing words and phrases, seeking so much that was new, had somehow changed me. "
98 " For me, writing stories set, well, wherever they're best set, is a form of cultural curiosity that is uniquely Scottish - we're famous for travelling in search of adventure. "
99 " My father could talk about the Romany way of life and its culture. He could talk about freedom and the Scottish spirit. But that was all he could talk about. I was desperate for someone to talk to but there was just nobody there. "
― Sara Sheridan , The Blessed and the Damned
100 " Lately Mirabelle had reflected wistfully if people even noticed her – a smartly dressed woman who came and went along the Promenade, always alone. "
― Sara Sheridan , London Calling