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Being Elizabeth (Ravenscar, #3) Being Elizabeth by Barbara Taylor Bradford
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Being Elizabeth Quotes Showing 1-8 of 8
“Successful women don't sleep until noon.”
Barbara Taylor Bradford, Being Elizabeth
“Even the most powerful woman needs a place to unwind.”
Barbara Taylor Bradford, Being Elizabeth
“My dear girl, you must cultivate a taste for the finer things. Civilized pleasures give meaning to life.”
Barbara Taylor Bradford, Being Elizabeth
“Yes, damn it, I love you! But the bedroom is not the boardroom, Robert. In the boardroom only one person can be in charge.”
Barbara Taylor Bradford, Being Elizabeth
“Elizabeth studied the blurry tabloid photo, which showed her cousin Mary Stuart leaving a Paris disco at dawn, drunkenly clinging to the arm of a French tennis pro. The message was very clear. Put passion first and you end up neither loved nor respected.”
Barbara Taylor Bradford, Being Elizabeth
“Elizabeth lay face-down on the massage table, and allowed Marco to relieve the stress of the business day with firm and knowing fingers. Success, she decided, was often a matter of knowing when to relax.”
Barbara Taylor Bradford, Being Elizabeth
“Mary never made it to the board meeting. Cunning Elizabeth simply arranged for her cousin's tennis instructor to "delay" her for an hour or two. The man was evidently a superb athlete, though it was entirely Mary's fault that she fell asleep afterwards. Elizabeth took control of the company that very afternoon, by a vote of six to one, while a sated Mary slept. And the silly girl never knew what hit her.”
Barbara Taylor Bradford, Being Elizabeth
“Elizabeth was counting on Marco to keep cousin Mary occupied until after the board meeting was over. A piece of cheese might catch a mouse, but an afternoon alone with a muscular masseur would ensnare her cousin far more effectively. And afterwards, while Mary lay sated and sleeping upon a massage table, wiser heads could determine the company's future. There were times, Elizabeth thought, when success in business demanded utter ruthlessness.”
Barbara Taylor Bradford, Being Elizabeth