Jeanne DuPrau famous quotes
Last updated: Sep 5, 2024
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I try to remind myself that we are never promised anything, and that what control we can exert is not over the events that befall us but how we address ourselves to them.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
It would be something that another person had written down without understanding its significance; just a sentence or two that would be like a flash of light.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
Lina loved her little sister so much that it was like an ache under her ribs.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
People find a way through just about anything.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
The main thing to do is pay attention. Pay close attention to everything, notice what no one else notices. Then you'll know what no one else knows, and that's always useful.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
His sympathy made tears spring to Lina's eyes. Doon looked startled for a moment, and then he took a step toward her and wrapped his arms around her. He gave her a squeeze so quick and tight that it made her cough, and then it made her laugh. She realized all at once that Doon--thin, dark-eyed Doon with his troublesome temper and his terrible brown jacket and his good heart--was the person that she knew better than anyone now. He was her best friend.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
Poppy was now almost well. She still slept more than usual, but when she wasn't sleeping she tromped around the doctor's house pulling spoons off the table and spilling cups of water and crumpling pages of books. That is, she was almost her old self.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
You know, son, I don't think there's such a thing as an easy life. There's always going to be hard work and there will always be misfortunes we can't control, lurking out at the edges - storms, sickness, wolves. But there is such a thing as a good life and I think that we have one here.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
Maybe there was no happily ever after [...] but there was happiness sometimes and she had it now, doing what she knew she was born for.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
Unintended consequences, he thought miserably. He was angry at his anger, the way it surged up and took over.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
The idea seemed to be that if you prayed extremely hard--especially if a lot of people prayed at once--maybe God would change things. The trouble was, what if your enemy was praying, too? Which prayer would God listen to?
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
Wouldn't it be strange, she thought, to have a blue sky? But she liked the way it looked. It would be beautiful - a blue sky.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
Why, if its going to be allright, do we see it getting worse every day?
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
They lifted their faces to the astonishing warmth. The sky arched over them, a pale, clear blue. Lina felt as though a lid that had been on her all her life had been lifted off. Light and air rushed though her, making a song, like the songs of Ember, only it was a song of joy. She looked at Doon and saw that he was smiling and crying at the same time, and she realized that she was, too.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
Remember the city, the city remember Where treasure is hidden under the ground The city, the city, always remember That's where the treasure will be found.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
People didn't make life, so they can't destroy it. Even if we were to wipe out every bit of life in the world, we can't touch the place life comes from. Whatever made the plants and animals and people spring up in the first place will always be there, and life will spring up again.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
A darkness different from Ember's, but just as frightening...
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
There is so much darkness in Ember, Lina. It's not just outside, it's inside us, too. Everyone has some darkness inside. It's like a hungry creature. It wants and wants and wants with a terrible power. And the more you give it, the bigger and hungrier it gets.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
The trouble with anger is, it gets hold of you. And then you aren't the master of yourself anymore. Anger is. And when anger is the boss, you get unintended consequences.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
It’s for my God, the god of dogs, and snakes and dust mites and albino bears and Siamese twins, the god of stars and starships and other dimensions, the god who loves everyone and makes everything marvelous.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
Mrs. Murdo, walkind even more briskly to keep her spirits up, was crossing Harken Square when something fell to the pavement just in front of her with a terrific thump. How extraordinary, she thought, bending to pick it up. It was sort of a bundle. She began to untie it.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
It wasn't because they had extraordinary powers, really, but because of how well they used the ordinary powers everyone had: the power of courage, the power of kindness, the powers of curiosity and knowledge.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
She realized all at once that Doon, thin, dark eyed Doon, with his troublesome temper and his terrible brown jacket, and his good heart---- was the person she knew better than anyone now. He was her best friend. --City of Ember--
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
Now Doon seemed to care for his new friends more than he did for her. Every time she thought about him she felt a thud of pain, like a bruised place inside her.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
Doon was touched. Kenny looked like a tiny little wisp, but there was something strong inside him. --People of Sparks--
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
When someone has been mean to you, why would you want to be good to them?' 'You wouldn't want to. That's what makes it hard. You do it anyway. Being good is hard. Much harder than being bad.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
What you need to learn, children, is the difference between right and wrong in every area of life. And once you learn the difference, you must always choose the right.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
A person who thought he knew everything simply didn’t understand how much there was to know.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
Lina couldn't sleep at first, thinking of the old songs and what they meant. Someone, long ago, had hoped that at least a few people would survive and had wanted them to remember her city and the treasure it held, the treasure that was most valuable of all - herself, her family, and all of the generations of people who had lived in that secret place, their purpose, though they didn't know it, to make sure that human beings did not vanish from the world, no matter what happened above.
-- Jeanne DuPrau -
What could be more interesting than thinking of mysterious happenings, finding the answers to intriguing questions, and making up new worlds?
-- Jeanne DuPrau
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