7 Quotes & Sayings By Jessica Taylor

Jessica Taylor's first book, The Voice of the Lonely Hearts Club, debuted on the New York Times bestseller list. She has also written seven novels about an ensemble of friends who are all dealing with their own personal issues, including love, divorce, and death. She is the author of the bestselling memoir Love With a Chance of Drowning, which was on The Wall Street Journal's list of "Best Books of 2009." She is also the author of the novels A Thousand Splendid Suns, I'm So Happy for You, and The Broken Places.

1
Henri said our names were fitting because we were destined to be together in our old age, like our great-great-aunts. Two gray old ladies in the bodies of teenage girls. Someday we’d live in a big house with faded curtains, a dozen or so cats, and a handful of our marbles long ago lost. On all accounts–our destiny, her clairvoyance, and our soon-to-be missing marbles– I believed her. Jessica Taylor
2
Henri held herself as if only her arms could keep her pieced together, and I saw that behind all her fake control–throwing herself at a teacher, carving our dad out of her heart–was something fragile. I wish we’d seen it sooner–my dad and Mr. Flynn, they had a responsibility to see it, to do better. Those moments were my sister spinning out.
 Jessica Taylor
3
She ran a streak of foundation under each eye, highlighter down the bridge of her nose, and bronzer beneath each cheekbone–a layer of armor before battle. Because that’s what these parties were to her, a war on all the heartbreaking boys in the San Francisco Bay Area. Jessica Taylor
4
Now our father lived in a world where we didn’t belong, with a needy girlfriend who didn’t look much older than Henri, a saltwater pool in need of daily skimming, and a flashy Porsche that needed to be raced around the roads of wine country. Fortunately, we didn’t need him either–that’s what Henri said. Jessica Taylor
5
Nobody could hold the same place in your heart as your sister. Love or hate her, she was the only person who grew up exactly like you, who knew the secrets of your household–the laughter that only the walls of your house contained or the screaming at a level low enough the neighbors couldn’t hear, the passive aggressive compliments or the little put-downs. Only your sister could know how it felt to grow up in the house that made you you. Jessica Taylor
6
Henri held herself as if only her arms could keep her pieced together, and I saw that behind all her fake control–throwing herself at a teacher, carving our dad out of her heart–was something fragile. I wish we’d seen it sooner–my dad and Mr. Flynn, they had a responsibility to see it, to do better. Those moments were my sister spinning out. Jessica Taylor