Home > Work > Dangerous Minds (Knight and Moon, #2)
1 " It is written by the Sage that you, yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe, deserve your love and affection. "
― Janet Evanovich , Dangerous Minds (Knight and Moon, #2)
2 " It has been my experience that the only normal people are those you don’t know very well. "
3 " Criminy, Emerson. That’s even worse,” Riley said. “Who asks someone he’s just met if she’d like to see his thimbles? That’s serial killer creepy.” Emerson "
4 " Einstein famously said if at first an idea is not absurd, there’s no hope for it. "
5 " If you had told somebody in the year 1800 that there were invisible things called germs and that they were responsible for the common cold, he would have thought that you were crazy and believed in magic,” Emerson said. “Today, everybody simply accepts it as fact, despite that they’ve never seen or knowingly touched a germ. "
6 " Whoa. Time out. It's been a long, stressful day, but let's not talk crazy. "
7 " The difference between adventure and adversity is attitude. "
8 " The game is afoot. "
9 " A wise man, recognizing that the world is an illusion, does not act as if it is real, and so he escapes suffering.” The "
10 " A man who does not know fear cannot die, because death has no place to enter.” Vernon "
11 " A hollowed-out volcano is every super-villain’s dream lair. It’s all about location, location, location.” Riley "
12 " Oscar Wilde said it's never the question that's indiscreet, only the answers. "
13 " I am just a simple monk. The sun shines on the just and unjust alike. If the sun does not judge, then who am I to do so? "
14 " Altogether, there are eight types of illusions. Magic, a dream, a bubble, a rainbow, lightning, the moon reflected in water, a mirage, and a city of celestial musicians.” Vernon "
15 " How we explain coincidences depends on how we see the world. Is everything connected or do things merely co-occur? It’s all in how you think. "
16 " Teddy Roosevelt who, as president, signed the Antiquities Act of 1906, allowing the president, with the stroke of a pen, to seize control of any lands he deems of natural, cultural, or scientific importance. It’s been used hundreds of times since 1906 to create national parks and federal monuments. "
17 " What choice do I have but to be myself? Everyone else was already taken. "