Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Life is too short to be on a diet.
I love reading books that can break my heart.
My husband makes sacrifices so that I can shine.
Sometimes you are strong, sometimes you are weak.
You don't realize how strong you are until you have to help someone else stand up.
There are, essentially, as many opinions on marriage as there are people in the world.
I never wanted a big wedding. I never wanted to wear a white dress or throw a bouquet.
I'd sing all day, every day, all the time if I thought it didn't sound like dying cats.
Notice the times in your life when you go above and beyond simply because you care so much.
As an author and a burgeoning screenwriter, the fact of the matter is I cannot do this alone.
I went to Acton-Boxborough Regional High School in Massachusetts and Emerson College in Boston.
I love writing two narratives! I think concurrent storylines are my favorite way to write a book.
I was obsessed with Hollywood from the time I was a kid. I always knew I wanted to live in Los Angeles.
You can't write about an iconic Hollywood star of the sixties without bumping up against Elizabeth Taylor.
I've always been drawn to the idea that small choices in our lives could have drastic effects on our future.
I don't think I'm capable of writing without caffeine. And most of the time, that caffeine comes from iced tea.
It wasn't until I set out to write a novel about marriage that I realized how little I knew about the institution.
I worked in feature film casting right out of college and spent a lot of time working with actors, directors, and producers.
I am methodical about my email inbox, and I always have a physical to-do list. Without those two things, I think I'd lose my mind.
Selling a film option and getting a studio on board can be a slow process, and until things are official, you never want to spill the beans.
When my husband and I first got married, I was so shocked at my own level of joy that I was convinced it was all going to come crashing down.
You have to know your value, demand to be respected, speak your mind, and dare to ask for what you want. I struggle with every single one of these.
I have often lost whole days jumping from one Wikipedia article after another in an attempt to understand the full scope of marriage as an institution.
I've always thought that a good book should be either the entry point inward, to learn about yourself, or a door outward, to open you up to new worlds.
When I wrote my first book, I was too scared to find out how people got books published. I was convinced that you needed some sort of magical potion that I didn't have.
Think both big and small. Loving to bake doesn't only mean becoming a baker. It could mean starting a blog, becoming a food photographer, or going into organic chemistry.
Writing for TV entails saying every dumb idea that comes into your head to a room of people. And doing so with the confidence that it doesn't make you look like an idiot.
I am constantly distracted by my own brain when I've completed a paragraph, realized I don't know what comes next, and start opening a browser tab without even realizing it.
Some days, I'll tell you that everything in life was meant to be and that there is an order to the universe. Other days, I'm convinced it's all a combination of luck and opportunity.
I can't tell you how many times I've been writing and then found myself seven clicks deep into a Wikipedia entry that I don't even care about. Self-distraction appears to be my version of sleepwalking.
As an author, I had spent years writing my stories on my own in a quiet room. My ideas traveled from my brain to my fingers, executed exactly as I saw fit, never veering from my own intent. TV simply doesn't work that way.
My passion is capturing what it feels like to love, be it romantic or otherwise. I love to watch two people realize what they meant for each other - and that goes across all media, books, TV, movies, personal essays; everything.
Starting with 'Forever, Interrupted,' I somehow convinced myself that in order to create content, I had to consume content. What this means is that I have legitimized binge-watching television and told myself that I must do it for work.
I came across 'The Song of Achilles' by Madeline Miller in one of the most romantic ways one can find a story. I was digging through a pile of used books at my local library when my hand gravitated toward its brilliant teal and glistening gold cover.
Why did I elope with my husband after knowing him for only four months? I wish I could show people the picture of the two of us that night and have them feel what I felt. But it's just a picture. It can only capture how things looked, not how they felt.
I am endlessly inspired by both the tenderness that can exist between two people and the excitement of falling in love. I'm very fortunate that I've been able to explore that in novels, a television show, some early development film projects, and essays about my own life.
I had moved across the country, taken internships, networked, worked long hours, and called in favors to get there. And I had done it. I was working in Hollywood. So imagine the melancholy I found myself in when I realized that I didn't love casting the way that I always thought I would.
We often compare the experience of writing a book to that of playing God. It is up to us, and only us, to determine what happens to the people we invent. It is for us alone to determine what is good and bad, just and unjust, appropriate and inappropriate for the worlds we create. I love that about writing books.
I write a book a year while creating TV and film projects. And being a writer isn't just writing: I have to chase down paychecks and manage foreign tax payments. I maintain a vibrant relationship with readers and bloggers. And when it comes to Hollywood, I typically have to have fifteen business meetings in the hopes that one leads to a project.