Top 71 Quotes & Sayings by Lauren Myracle

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American author Lauren Myracle.
Last updated on November 7, 2024.
Lauren Myracle

Lauren Myracle is an American writer of young adult fiction. She has written many novels, including the three best-selling "IM" books, ttyl, ttfn and l8r, g8r. Her book Thirteen Plus One was released May 4, 2010.

Every time I write a new book, I want to push myself to try something different.
Kids need to see their world reflected back to them.
I know I seem really friendly, but I'm a closet introvert. — © Lauren Myracle
I know I seem really friendly, but I'm a closet introvert.
When guys talk about sex, eyebrows don't get raised. It's different for girls.
Being an author of banned books is cool, I've decided.
It's neither my job nor within my capabilities to save people. But a book sure can try.
What I find cool about being a banned author is this: I'm writing books that evoke a reaction, books that, if dropped in a lake, go down not with a whimper but a splash.
God, it sucks to disappoint your parents, even at forty-two years old.
I don't shy from controversy. I'm telling stories, and I'll tell whatever story seems like it wants to be told.
Kids are smart. Knowledge is power. Let them figure things out. Don't turn into that grown-up who they won't come to.
I understand why parents worry about books - they're worried about their kids. They want to keep their kids safe. But parents aren't always realistic.
Sometimes I worry I'm writing 'Fifty Shades of Grey' for teenagers, but I'm not.
Whatever you hold onto that you want to do, and that other people tell you you are foolish to want to do - don't give up. — © Lauren Myracle
Whatever you hold onto that you want to do, and that other people tell you you are foolish to want to do - don't give up.
Give your kid some credit for being smart - just because they read about something doesn't mean they will do it.
I'm always drawn to the underdogs, to the people whose stories don't get told.
Ideas matter. The world matters. Our lives matter, and the choices we make as we navigate our lives perhaps matter most of all.
I keep what I know about Sarah Lynn and Lawrence to myself. I also remind myself that even if Sarah Lynn does have a scary strict father, that doesn't release her from the responsibility of treating others with respect. Abuse of power is wrong, no matter the context, no matter the history. What is "power" anyway? Power is an ego trip. Power is a way to rise yourself up by lowering others, and I want nothing of it.
If you breathed deep and set your mind to it, you could rise above your anger.
Three hot chicks for three hot chicks." "THEY'RE NOT CHICKS! THEY'RE DUCKS!
You know, this technology that we have, and the Internet and Twitter and Facebook - I get so many of those emails that talk about hard times that kids have gone through, how books have helped them, but also happy times.
I'm in loooove with this boy, and when you in love with someone, you don't give up on 'em, mo matter what.
You have to be nicer to me," I said. Again he laughed. "What? I'm the King of nice. What are you talking about?" "You have to be nicer to me or... or..." "Or what?" he said. Still Lars, still charming and jokey, but with a thread of fear. It snaked in and pierced my numbness and almost broke my resolve. Almost, but not quite. "Or I have ti break up with you." I whispered What was there more to say? Nothing. So I hung up.
And books are such an empowering way to give voice to some of these kids who aren't yet ready to tell their story. Or don't know what their story is, or are trying to figure it out.
Curse false-hand-holding boys!
I was just teasing," I say. "I myself don't like to eat plain butter, but hey, it's a free world.
Sometimes when we forget to do things for others, it's because we're too wrapped up in our own problems.
Even so, I was proud of myself for taking action at all. I didn't hide or run away or pretend the ugliness didn't happen. I stood up and said something that was true. I said it out loud, and by doing so, I was standing up for lots of people, not just me.
We are all flawed, my dear. Every one of us. And believe me, we've all made mistakes. You've just got to take a good hard look at yourself, change what needs to be changed, and move one, pet.
You sh?uld eat ? waffle! Y?u ??n't b? sad ?f ??u eat ? waffle!
Hey. What is it that famous person said? 'It'll all work out in the end, and if it doesn't, that means it's not the end yet'?
Some people do want to stand on the rooftop and scream out their story. Others are cowering in the corner, or sitting with a blank face in class, and not knowing how to tell their story.
I'm a southern girl, and I grew up with this slightly schizophrenic upbringing where I bounced back and forth between Atlanta, Georgia, and a tiny mountain town called Brevard, North Carolina. My parents were divorced, and my two lives were very different because of socioeconomic reasons.
Prancing around with marshmallowss on your nipples does *not* constitute living your life fully!
What is 'power' anyway? Power is an ego trip. Power is a way to rise yourself up by lowering others, and I want nothing of it.
You should eat a waffle! You can't be sad if you eat a waffle!
My angel-boy is close now, as in five-feet-away close. There's no way I'm going to burst into song in front of him. But then the contrary part of me says, you're going to let a boy keep you from singing out loud? Sing, sister! Sing! So I do, and my angel-boy turns his head.
One: Don't play leapfrog with elephants. Two: Don't pet a tiger unless his tail is wagging. Three: Never, ever, mess with the Ladies Auxiliary. -Mayberry Rules for a Long, Happy Life
Yes, that man acted ugly," she told us in plain English. "But throwing more ugliness back at him ain't the answer. — © Lauren Myracle
Yes, that man acted ugly," she told us in plain English. "But throwing more ugliness back at him ain't the answer.
I didn't like being alone. Being alone was slightly better than having to deal with people, that's all. Or so I'd convinced myself.
Christmas is never over,unless you want it to be... Christmas is a state of mind.
I loved everyone who said yes to the world and tried to make it better instead of worse, because so much in the world was ugly- and just about all the ugly parts were due to humans.
Hello toes," I say. They're good toes. I like that they're long and slender and not the slightest bit stubby. I wiggle them, ten unstubby waves that say, "And hello to you, Human Host!" Except they're toes. I'm talking to my toes. Maybe I'm not bored... maybe I'm lonely?
hi, puppy." she's not a puppy. She's a girl," Nancy's mother says. Nancy pats me and says, "Good puppy. Nice puppy." When he mother bends down to pull her away, she wraps both arms around my legs and wails. "No! My puppy!
When you make a solemn promise to a friend, it ain't right to go back on it. No. Never let your friend down, never break a trust, and when you give your word, never go back on it. -Sheriff Andy Taylor
I've written a lot of novels for teens and tweens ... but I'd never really tackled the North Carolina side of me. And it's so strong and so important, and yet I hadn't acknowledged it. And so one of the things I wanted to do in "Shine" is take that on.
But you have to live in the present. You have to take the old and make it new -- that's my point.
Knowledge was more powerful than fear. Love was stronger than hate.
Suck it up. This is the life you chose for yourself, so buck up and deal. — © Lauren Myracle
Suck it up. This is the life you chose for yourself, so buck up and deal.
Every girl on the planet was familiar to one-last-time e-mail checks.
I'm sorry," he said again, and this time he took those words and owned them.
And they just slam the door. And they don't peek into that land any more. And they forget that teens and tweens are people, absolutely just as much as adults are. And their problems may play out on a smaller scale, but the things they go through are equally as valid as a CEO trying to figure out how to deal with a crisis at work. I just write for teens because I love 'em.
Also, as an author, character has always been what I'm most interested in - much more so than plot or setting, although those are good things too.
We all mess up. It's what we learn from our mistakes that matters.
I live in my own little world. But its ok, they know me here.
I think that ties in with issues of identity as well - that sometimes there are parts of us we want to hide, and then there's other times we say, "You know what? Nope. Done hiding that part."
Other people have suggested that I write about teens because I'm perpetually stuck in that stage of my own development. That could very well be true. I would throw out that teens and tweens are just absolutely fabulous and the most interesting people on the planet. And it is a time of high drama, and everything matters.
If everyone started off the day singing, just think how happy they'd be.
zoegirl: have u named the chicks? SnowAngel:yes, but i keep getting them mixed up. so now i call all of them "squishy." they're the collective squishy. zoegirl: *r* they squishy? SnowAngel: when you squeeze them,yes. but not in a yucky way. SnowAngel: they're growing on me, the little squishies. altho 1 of them pooped on my pillow. zoegirl: u let them on your bed? SnowAngel: they like it when i bounce them.
I did a lot of research on a couple different things. One was, how do people handle hating themselves and hating others? And hatred is a secondary emotion, I think; it always springs from something else ... usually fear, that's probably what it is. So I looked a lot at that.
And you're figuring out who you are, and you haven't yet become stagnant in your thinking. You haven't solidified. And one thing that I find is that a lot of grown-ups tend to look back on their high school or middle school years and say, "Oh, thank God all that's over."
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