11 Quotes & Sayings By Kate Lattey

Kate Lattey is best known for her first novel, Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson, which has sold almost 150,000 copies. Her first book was self-published in 2006, and she has since gone on to publish two more books. She is currently working on her fourth novel, The Secret of Midway Cove. Kate lives in Texas with her husband of more than twenty years.

1
Never tell her that something is impossible, because she'll kill herself proving you wrong. Kate Lattey
2
Real is..just being you. It's not letting yourself be defined by other people's opinions of you, of who they think you are, or what they expect you to be. It's refusing to let them squash you into the box they've built for you, and just being yourself, no matter what anyone else thinks. Because you're never going to matter to everyone, just like everyone's never going to matter to you. So you choose the people whose opinions you care about, and you be real for them. Kate Lattey
3
I think you're wrong."" Well I think you're naive, " Hayley snapped." Maybe, " Marley conceded, starting to walk away. "But I'd rather be that than a bully like you. Kate Lattey
4
Goodbye, " she told him, running her hand across his broad back one last time. "I love you. And I'll never, ever stop missing you. Kate Lattey
5
Everyone's pain is relative. We've learned how to deal with grief, because we've had to. But Bree hasn't. And our grief was shared, because we all felt it at the same time. She had to deal with hers alone. Kate Lattey
6
The future hovered in front of her, and she rode Cruise towards it, her hands steady on the reins and her head among the clouds. Kate Lattey
7
I clung to the dream like a lifeline, the only thing worth keeping going for. That was why I had agreed to come here. I'd always said I would sell my soul for a pony of my own. Kate Lattey
8
Because that saying about sticks and stones is a pack of lies. Unkind words hurt more than anything else. You end up carrying them around in your head, wondering if they’re true. Bruises fade, but self-doubt follows you forever. Kate Lattey
9
The pony is mad. She can go from a relaxed walk to a flat out gallop in seconds if something spooks her, and she won’t stop until she practically crashes into something. I’ve seen her buck, rear and spin around in circles. She’s completely unpredictable and I don’t even trust her on the ground. As far as I’m concerned, Alec’s welcome to her, and he relishes the challenge. For some reason, he loves that pony most of all. Perhaps it’s because no-one else would give her a chance, that they’d written her off as crazy, mean, dangerous. Alec admires her independent spirit, I think, and maybe he likes that she still has that strength of spirit, that she still challenges him every time he rides her. He can’t completely dominate her, and he doesn’t try. He wants a partnership with her. And slowly, slowly, his father is taking that away from him, bullying the mare and his son at the same time, seeking to fit them into the same mould, the only one he knows. The strong succeed while the weak fall behind. Kate Lattey
10
I’d looked around my room at the ribbons and sashes and rosettes hanging from the walls, at the photos of my ponies clearing the highest fences with me crouched in the saddle, a look of utter determination on my face. I’d made myself look hard at the pictures, at my legs swinging backwards over the fences, at my body lying low over my pony’s neck, my hands grasping at the reins as I turned them in mid-air. At the way that Teddy’s eyes were bulging as I pulled him around a tight turn, at the way the veins popped out on Buck’s lathered neck, at Springbok’s open mouth, dripping with foam. I’d looked hard at them all, and I hadn’t liked what I’d seen. . Kate Lattey