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Circa24

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Circa24 is a professor of Biology. She received a Doctorate in Zoology from The University of Toronto. For many years, she has taught classes on environmental biology and animal behavior. She has spoken at international conferences on the biological roots of cruelty, discrimination, and greed. She uses the pen name Circa24 to distinguish her creative writing from her technical and non-fiction works. Author’s comment: “Hey, if a pseudonym is good enough for Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, Mary Ann Evans, and Samuel Clements, then it’s good enough for me.”.

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Circa24 In the beginning, I had intended to take an entirely different path, but Tissi dragged me into her world. That's why I warn people up front that the b…moreIn the beginning, I had intended to take an entirely different path, but Tissi dragged me into her world. That's why I warn people up front that the book will be unsettling.

Too often, enslavement is portrayed as little more than a form of forced labor. However, the greater horror is in its dehumanization, and that was the aspect I wanted to drive home. Every dehumanizing torture and every degradation in the book has precedence in one or more systems of enslavement. I chose the bakery setting because it was one of the most feared fates an enslaved person could endure in the Roman era. Like a sentence to the mines, it hailed a short life and tortuous death. Even the Romans acknowledged this, and it formed a core theme in the picaresque story by Apuleius, The Golden Ass where, in the 9th book, Lucius is sold into labor to drive a baker's mill-wheel.

Torture and degradation of the enslaved have been an accepted form of amusement through the ages and, as in American lynchings, have served as a bonding ritual to unite the empowered community against the subjugated one. I tried to leave out the torture reserved for Deilos, that was reportedly employed by several of the guards at Auschwitz-Birkenau and by the DINA at Villa Grimaldii under Pinochet (hence the names Birki and Rimm). More recently, one American army sergeant was convicted for a similar act of torture (Dishneau 2006, cited in: https://muse.jhu.edu/article/402871/s...). I tried to leave that bit out, but ultimately, I could not ignore the abjections of these victims. (When I substituted a less vial passage, the story didn't read right. However, I tried to temper it with his Harrie "name," Dielos, a double nod, first to the cult of Dionysus and Leto, the twin gods of love whose cult was centered at Delos. Second to Daedalus, the son of Icarus who flew too close to the sun and was a metaphor for truth (Remember: Deilos was a political prisoner, and they are often singled out for more horrific abuses.)

I also wanted to make the terror of the resistance palpable and the acceptance by most of society shocking. Each person who fights the system could be charged with an energy crime and become subject to the same filth and humiliation. Rather than a clear-cut good-guy bad-guy dichotomy, I have some characters awaken slowly to the horrors and others who experience sudden revelations. Like most of us, who don't give two thoughts about the people who make our cheap consumer goods, most people in Silent Consent and Endured just accept the conditions of the Nameless without thinking about their roles, Perhaps our world would be a little better if we asked how and who supports our quality of life, and include future generations in those computations.
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Circa24 Remember, he wasn't just Jackie's student; he was close to her and her second in command on the dig. Their friendship dates back years to when she fir…moreRemember, he wasn't just Jackie's student; he was close to her and her second in command on the dig. Their friendship dates back years to when she first worked on his father's ranch. Jackie and Kayla even housed him on occasion. Given these facts, Jackie could easily have given him a spare key to retrieve materials.(less)
Average rating: 4.21 · 43 ratings · 15 reviews · 7 distinct worksSimilar authors
Thomas Hardy Was an Optimis...

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Silent Consent

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Endured by The Gods (Silent...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 8 ratings
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Silent Consent

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 6 ratings4 editions
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An Encounter With Cows

3.67 avg rating — 3 ratings3 editions
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Endured by the Gods: Silent...

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Thomas Hardy Was an Optimis...

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Published on July 03, 2025 10:41
Little Fuzzy
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Lynn shared a highlight from
Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir
“Are all Russians crazy?” “Yes,” he said with a smile. “It is the only way to be Russian and happy at the same time.” “That’s…dark.” “That’s Russian!”
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Lynn shared a highlight from
Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir
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They say hunger is the greatest seasoning. When you’re starving, your brain rewards you handsomely for finally eating. Good job, it says, we get to not die for a while!
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Circa24 Circa24 is 50% done with Little Fuzzy
Little Fuzzy by H. Beam Piper
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Little Fuzzy by H. Beam Piper
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Circa24 Circa24 rated a book it was amazing
The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell
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For me, this was a re-read. In fact, it's my third re-read, and each time, I take away more from The Sparrow. The book has so many layers that each time, I feel as though I've peeled back another one and exposed something new.

The story focuses on th
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The Shattering Peace by John Scalzi
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Keep It in the Family by John Marrs
Keep It in the Family
by John Marrs (Goodreads Author)
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Think you figured it out? Think again. This is the first John Marrs novel that I've read, but it won't be the last. Imagine being pregnant and moving into your dream house, only to find a body. A child's body. Then another. Then another.

That's the s
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Quotes by Circa24  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“I told you, Cow, Tarquin doesn’t demote. She destroys.”
Circa24, Silent Consent

“She gazed over her oxygen mask at the small, smiling Christmas tree that sat on the table behind her.  Tonight, the whirling sound of the disk in the drive was a song that was sweeter than any lullaby.”
Circa24, Thomas Hardy was an Optimist: A Collection of Short Stories From the Plague Years.

“When we entered the apartment, none of us had to ask about the food basket.  From the look on Dad's face, we had received a ham.  We always prayed for a turkey.  It put him in a better mood.”
Circa24, Thomas Hardy was an Optimist: A Collection of Short Stories From the Plague Years.

“At a gut level, she knew this illness was one more ploy by her mother—one more ploy to keep Karen under her mother's thumb”
Circa24

“She gazed over her oxygen mask at the small, smiling Christmas tree that sat on the table behind her.  Tonight, the whirling sound of the disk in the drive was a song that was sweeter than any lullaby.”
Circa24, Thomas Hardy was an Optimist: A Collection of Short Stories From the Plague Years.

“I stopped and stared at the washing machine, and I felt revulsion at knowing that his things had been in there ahead of mine.”
Circa24, Thomas Hardy Was an Optimist: A Collection of Short Stories From the Plague Years

“When you reach our age, everyone wants to keep you alive with granola.  Consider this breakfast an act of liberation.  I got greasy egg sandwiches, bacon, and hash browns.”
Circa24, Thomas Hardy was an Optimist: A Collection of Short Stories From the Plague Years.

“When we entered the apartment, none of us had to ask about the food basket.  From the look on Dad's face, we had received a ham.  We always prayed for a turkey.  It put him in a better mood.”
Circa24, Thomas Hardy was an Optimist: A Collection of Short Stories From the Plague Years.

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