Lois’s answer to “Dear Ms Bujold: Do you have favorite lines in your own work, or in the writing of others? And, if s…” > Likes and Comments

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message 1: by Kim (new)

Kim I’ve been remembering “I didn’t vote for him”


message 2: by Brzk (new)

Brzk Definitely not the deepest one possible, but I always feel heartened by the dialogue between Miles and Ky Tung:
"You going to cover my funeral expenses, son?"
"Splendidly. Banners, dancing girls, and enough beer to float your coffin to Valhalla."


message 3: by Caroline (new)

Caroline Palmer My favorite has always been the kitten tree from Cetaganda, the whole scene.


message 4: by Michelle (new)

Michelle For me it was the disastrous dinner party in A Civil Campaign!


message 5: by Margaret (new)

Margaret Ista's encounter with the Father of Winter in Paladin of Souls, and her subsequent passing of His message on to Arhys -- chokes me up every time.


message 6: by Scott (new)

Scott Though I love all the above, especially the one about Freddy given the current world events, but I'm going to have stick with my old favorite: "I am the man who owns Vorkosigan Vashnoi." The whole scene is genius but the line delivers subtext and introspection by the truckload.


message 7: by Jill (new)

Jill Carroll What the hell, Simon?!


message 8: by Smurphs (new)

Smurphs So, so, many, but my all time favorite isn't even in the books:

"Miles hits thirty, thirty hits back."

And I want to put "Well, that's a relief" on my tombstone, but my wife refuses.


message 9: by Talli (new)

Talli Ruksas The dirty little secret of democracy is that just because you get a vote, doesn't mean you get your choice


message 10: by Talli (new)

Talli Ruksas Who do you think you are, Lord Vorkosigan?


message 11: by Talli (new)

Talli Ruksas Mine to me, yes


message 12: by Talli (new)

Talli Ruksas Damn the wine, damn the whine!


message 13: by Talli (new)

Talli Ruksas What seagull?


message 14: by Steven (new)

Steven Sarafian A humorous line in your work (if one knows Jackson's Whole): “…but they always beat the pants off me, unless I cheated. Though you’re allowed to cheat.”

And one from John Morressy: [They read] “the chronicle of Merlimor the Bewildered and his seven, or possibly nine, sons. Or daughters.”


message 15: by Steven (new)

Steven Sarafian Beautiful writing: “As Tanar turned away, his habitual smirk slipped into a smile of such surpassing tenderness that Nikys’s breath caught.
It was gone in a moment, the sardonic mask back in place. She might have thought she’d imagined it, except that she doubted she could ever forget it.”

And from Dorothy L. Sayers: “…she made up her face with just so much artful restraint as to suggest enormous experience aping an impossible innocence…”


message 16: by Martha (new)

Martha “The really unforgivable acts are committed by calm men in beautiful green silk rooms, who deal death wholesale, by the shipload, without lust, or anger, or desire, or any redeeming emotion to excuse them but cold fear of some pretended future. But the crimes they hope to prevent in that future are imaginary. The ones they commit in the present — they are real.” (Shards of Honor)


message 17: by Jerri (new)

Jerri I carefully looked up my favorite line from Memory and typed it here, but it seems to have been lost. I will try again, but don't have time to check to be sure I have it exactly right. "The only thing you can't give for your heart's desire is your heart." Spoken by Miles to Gregor when asked why he didn't accept the bribe of becoming the little Admiral again.

Favorite opening line by another author; "In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit."


message 18: by Talli (new)

Talli Ruksas "The one thing you can't trade for your heart's desire is your heart" has always been one of my favorites too Jerri


message 19: by Donna (new)

Donna A life in ruins, with vomiting.


message 20: by Derek (new)

Derek "Count Vorkosigan, sir?" is the only closing line I will always remember of any book I've read. There was excellent foreshadowing leading up to it, including a rather facetious comment by Miles which turned true. To be honest, I'm a little sad no one mentioned it before me... but then, there are so *many* great lines to pick from. "The only thing you can't give for your heart's desire is your heart." will also always stand out.


message 21: by Dane (new)

Dane All true wealth is biological.


message 22: by Brzk (new)

Brzk Ok, this last one is iconic. They are too many, people. Can't pick one.


message 23: by Marti (new)

Marti Dolata The Aftermath of Shards has many moving lines ""Certainly," said the medtech, moving aside. "An honor is not diminished for being shared." And so he did, as shy as an apprentice saint washing his first leper. "Don't be afraid," she said. "The dead cannot hurt you. They give you no pain, except that of seeing your own death in their faces. And one can face that, I find." Yes, he thought, the good face pain. But the great—they embrace it. "


message 24: by Ann (new)

Ann Perrone My husband's favorite line is "Let's see what happens."


message 25: by Vivaine (new)

Vivaine "You just go on."


message 26: by Christi (new)

Christi Bell “Naturally not. Fountains keep nothing for themselves


message 27: by John (new)

John I can't remember the exact words, but Miles correcting Mark(?) or maybe Galen about Cordelia, "She has always put people before principles."


message 28: by Mary (new)

Mary Silcox This one always gets me in the feels: "And the Bastard grant us... in our direst need, the smallest gifts: the nail of the horseshoe, the pin of the axle, the feather at the pivot point, the pebble at the mountain's peak, the kiss in despair, the one right word."


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