43 Quotes by Candice Millard
- Author Candice Millard
-
Quote
Theodore you have the mind but you have not the body, and without the help of the body the mind cannot go as far as it should. I am giving you the tools, but it is up to you to make your body.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Candice Millard
-
Quote
She (the First Lady, entering the room with her gravely wounded husband) would admit fear but not despair.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Candice Millard
-
Quote
The ordinary traveler, who never goes off the beaten route and who on this beaten route is carried by others, without himself doing anything or risking anything, does not need to show much more initiative and intelligence than an express package," Roosevelt sneered.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Candice Millard
-
Quote
The author points out strikingly different reactions to calamity. While many passengers of a devastating shipwreck were thankful to be alive, future presidential assassin Charles Guiteau saw his being spared as proof of his exceptionalism rather than of the grace from which he benefited.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Candice Millard
-
Quote
Dr. Lister, who treated the wounded Pres. Garfield, had been so stung by the medical establishment's reaction to his embrace of African-American doctors that he, in response, refused to do part from the status quo enough to considering using antiseptic techniques.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Candice Millard
-
Quote
I so much despise a man who blows his own horn, that I go to the other extreme.
- Share
- Author Candice Millard
-
Quote
With the Lincoln assassination, the South didn't feel it could mourn along with the North. But Garfield was beloved by all the American people. He was trusted and respected by North and South, by freed slaves and former slave owners. Also by pioneers, which his parents had been, and by immigrants.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Candice Millard
-
Quote
When I began work on my first book, 'The River of Doubt,' which tells the story of Theodore Roosevelt's 1914 descent of an unmapped river in the Amazon rainforest, I thought of it as a tale of adventure, exploration and extraordinary courage.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Candice Millard
-
Quote
Late-19th-century America, with all its chaotic change and immense potential, seems to have been the perfect place to become not someone else, but someone new.
- Tags
- Share