Alex Light

  • Kay🖤has quotedlast year
    It’s not our fault for not giving them a reason to stay. It’s their fault for not finding one.
  • Kay🖤has quotedlast year
    And with all the downsides of love, you managed to show me the upside,”
  • Kay🖤has quotedlast year
    Read to me.”

    “Why?”

    “Because you go somewhere else when you read. I want to go there with you.”
  • мσσηhas quotedlast year
    It was like, if love couldn’t exist in reality, at least it was alive in fiction. Between the pages it was safe.
    The heartbreak was contained. There was no aftermath, no shock waves. I mean, there’s a reason all books end right after the couple gets together. No one wants to keep reading long enough to see the happily ever after turn into an unhappily ever after. Right?
  • мσσηhas quotedlast year
    Love was destructive, dangerous.
  • мσσηhas quotedlast year
    I knew a lot about love. I knew there were two kinds: 1) real love and 2) fictional love. The real kind was what I thought my parents had, pre-divorce. The fictional kind was what I’d preferred since.
  • мσσηhas quotedlast year
    I’m guessing you want to be the prince?”

    “Only if you’re the princess.”
  • Justine Bragadohas quoted2 years ago
    Could love really
    make the world stop? Why did it make every female character feel alive? Wasn’t she alive before she met him? Or was she in some zombie-like, comatose state? How did love change that, and more importantly, why couldn’t I seem to get enough of this unrealistic crap?
  • Justine Bragadohas quoted2 years ago
    Love was destructive, dangerous. It was safer on pages, and these books were enough of an experience for me. I mean, look at Romeo and Juliet. Was the play tragic? Sure.
  • Justine Bragadohas quoted2 years ago
    “Do you regret this?” she asked.
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