Libba Bray Quote

You see, the glamour girl standing before you was not the dame I first laid eyes on in Penn Station. In fact, at first I thought she was the charwoman. Don’t you remember how frightful you looked that night, Honey Pie? Sam patted Evie’s hand. Her strained smile pleased him. She was sooty and grimy. Had on her mother’s dress and those thick woolen stockings that grandmas and war orphans wear. And one of her teeth was missing. Ghastly. But I was smitten.Oh, Daddy, you might need a visit to the dentist soon yourself. Evie laughed and tightened her grip on Sam’s hand.

Libba Bray

You see, the glamour girl standing before you was not the dame I first laid eyes on in Penn Station. In fact, at first I thought she was the charwoman. Don’t you remember how frightful you looked that night, Honey Pie? Sam patted Evie’s hand. Her strained smile pleased him. She was sooty and grimy. Had on her mother’s dress and those thick woolen stockings that grandmas and war orphans wear. And one of her teeth was missing. Ghastly. But I was smitten.Oh, Daddy, you might need a visit to the dentist soon yourself. Evie laughed and tightened her grip on Sam’s hand.

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About Libba Bray

Martha Elizabeth "Libba" Bray (March 11, 1964) is an American writer of young adult novels including the Gemma Doyle Trilogy, Going Bovine, and The Diviners.