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Quote by Rachel Caine

“You've grown up being special, and this is how most people live their lives...alone. On their own. Undecided. And they get used to that feeling. It's just new for you.”

Quote by Rachel Caine

Work

Fall of Night

In 'Fall of Night,' readers are immersed in a gripping narrative that explores themes of survival and the human spirit in a world where nightfall brings forth malevolent forces. The story follows a lone figure as they struggle to find safety and truth amidst a backdrop of fear and oppression. more

Author

Rachel Caine
Rachel Caine

Rachel Caine, born on April 27, 1962, is a renowned American science fiction and fantasy writer. Her works are known for their unique worldviews and rich imagination, which have won her a large fan base. more

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“He shakes his head. "They're hunting the Enkis. I know that. And I get that. But . . . we're special." "The reason they want them is because they're special. Anchovies aren't going to cure anyone." "That's not the special I mean." He catches another fish and hugs it to his chest. I'm trying to be gentle. "They're only special to you because they're yours." "I could say the same thing about that cute kid you were holding." Well, shit.”

“The worm’s bad luck is the bird’s good fortune.”

“It is impossible to make your own luck without the ingredient of hard work.”

“Fortune hides behind action.”

“There is only one example of GOD- that There is no example of GOD”. Reflection God has no shape, No color, no form. Not a thing you can touch, Not a sound in the storm. Yet He is in everything — In the wind, in the stone, In every breath we take, In every seed that’s sown. Eyes of flesh may never see, But with divya drishti eyes set free Through the grace of Guru's hand, We begin to understand. He runs the stars, Knows all that’s true, Omnipresent, pure, In me, in you.”

“To retrieve the ill consequences of a foolish conduct, and by struggling manfully with distress to subdue it, is one of the noblest efforts of wisdom and virtue. Whoever, therefore, calls such a man fortunate, is guilty of no less impropriety in speech than he would be who should call the statuary or the poet fortunate who carved a Venus or who writ an Iliad.”