Sarah Suozzi

Add friend
Sign in to Goodreads to learn more about Sarah.


Loading...
Ellen Raskin
“daughter of the servants.” “Gee, you must have been lonely, Judge, having nobody to play with.” “I played with Sam Westing—chess. Hour after hour I sat staring down at that chessboard. He lectured me, he insulted me, and he won every game.” The judge thought of their last game: She had been so excited about taking his queen, only to have the master checkmate her in the next move. Sam Westing had deliberately sacrificed his queen and she had fallen for it. “Stupid child, you can’t have a brain in that frizzy head to make a move like that.” Those were the last words he ever said to her. The judge continued: “I was sent to boarding school when I was twelve. My parents visited me at school when they could, but I never set foot in the Westing house again, not until two weeks ago.” “Your folks must have really worked hard,” Sandy said. “An education like that costs a fortune.” “Sam Westing paid for my education. He saw that I was accepted into the best schools, probably arranged for my first job, perhaps more, I don’t know.” “That’s the first decent thing I’ve heard about the old man.” “Hardly decent, Mr. McSouthers. It was to Sam Westing’s advantage to have a judge in his debt. Needless to say, I have excused myself from every case remotely connected with”
Ellen Raskin, The Westing Game

Diane Setterfield
“And now, dear reader, the story is over. It is time for you to cross the bridge once more and return to the world you came from. This river, which is and is not the Thames, must continue flowing without you. You have haunted here long enough, and besides, you surely have rivers of your own to attend to?”
Diane Setterfield, Once Upon a River

Marissa Meyer
“Now mine eyes see the heart that once we did search for, and I fear this heart shall be mended, nevermore.”
Marissa Meyer, Heartless

John Grisham
“Live your life the way you want. You'll figure it out.”
John Grisham

Madeleine L'Engle
“We think because we have words, not the other way around. The more words we have, the better able we are to think conceptually.”
Madeleine L'Engle

year in books
Blair M...
117 books | 30 friends

Blondel...
150 books | 46 friends

Dwain F...
93 books | 16 friends

Hanna D...
125 books | 35 friends

Cortney...
44 books | 22 friends



Favorite Genres



Polls voted on by Sarah

Lists liked by Sarah