Best quotes by Sarah MacLean on Love

Checkout quotes by Sarah MacLean on Love

  • Critics seem to forget that every love story is different - that there is uniqueness in even the most commonplace of matches.
    - Sarah MacLean
  • Teenagers are asking, 'Who am I?' and 'How do I fit in?' in every aspect of their lives, and the best YA romances appreciate that there is more to a teen's life than finding love.
    - Sarah MacLean
  • Of all the myriad ways we define love, there is perhaps none more honest and powerful than this: Great love is rooted in great partnership.
    - Sarah MacLean
  • Of all the myriad ways we define love, there is perhaps none more honest and powerful than this: Great love is rooted in great partnership.
    - Sarah MacLean
  • No matter how troubled a character's history, romance novels tell us, love can be built upon it, and happily-ever-after can result. What's more, the darker the past, the brighter the future - and the better the read.
    - Sarah MacLean
  • The trick to great romance is in overcoming adversity. In realizing that love is worth some uphill climbs.
    - Sarah MacLean
  • The trick to great romance is in overcoming adversity. In realizing that love is worth some uphill climbs.
    - Sarah MacLean
  • That first meeting - the one where the hero and heroine start the slow burn that takes the whole story to turn into true love - is the single most important part of the whole book. Nail it, and you've won yourself readers.
    - Sarah MacLean
  • There is perhaps no more rewarding romance heroine than she who is not expected to find love. The archetype comes in many disguises - the wallflower, the spinster, the governess, the single mom - but always with one sad claim: Love is not in her cards.
    - Sarah MacLean
  • At the heart of every successful romance novel lies the evolution of its characters. Through love, heroes and heroines grow not only into a perfect match, but into stronger, better, more admirable people.
    - Sarah MacLean
  • In fiction, as in real life, love might inspire acts that are at best foolish and at worst life-threatening, but in the best romances, love is the final, secret ingredient that turns mere mortals into heroes and heroines.
    - Sarah MacLean
  • When it comes to love, the English language bears no shortage of cliches.
    - Sarah MacLean
  • As a romance novelist, I have a rather skewed view of babies. You see, they don't typically fit into the classic structure of the romance novel - romance is about two people finding each other and falling in love against insurmountable odds. Babies... well... babies are complicated.
    - Sarah MacLean
  • In books by women and for women, it should come as no surprise that heroines are the heroes of the action, finding themselves, their power and their future through love.
    - Sarah MacLean
  • Romance readers love a wealthy hero, and why not? There's value in a man able to hire a helicopter, a coach and six horses, or a collection of werewolves to do his bidding - and the bidding of the lucky woman on his arm.
    - Sarah MacLean