Contessa Mazzie

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Diane L. Kowalyshyn
“Talk about delusional. The apple didn’t fall far from the tree. His mother’s doctor reported she’d recently been plagued by wild imaginings, too. Make believe ran in his family. He was nuttier than a jar of peanut butter.”
Diane L. Kowalyshyn, Crossover

Harold Phifer
“One other thing—she was always armed. Ossie May talked about her gun even more than she bragged about her cooking. Out of nowhere, she took me to the gun range. She finished one clip with her right hand then unloaded the other clip with her left hand. I certainly got the message. She was not to be messed with or messed over. I was scared straight by this woman.”
Harold Phifer, Surviving Chaos: How I Found Peace at A Beach Bar

John Steinbeck
“He had said, "I am a man," and that meant certain things to Juana. It meant that he was half insane and half god. It meant that Kino would drive his strength against a mountain and plunge his strength against the sea. Juana, in her woman's soul, knew that the mountain would stand while the man broke himself; that the sea would surge while the man drowned in it. And yet it was this thing that made him a man, half insane and half god, and Juana had need of a man; she could not live without a man.”
John Steinbeck, The Pearl

James W. Loewen
“The textbooks also fail to show how the continuous Indian wars have reverberated through our culture. Carleton Beals has written that "our acquiescence in Indian dispossession has molded the American character." As soon as Natives were no longer conflict partners, their image deteriorated in the minds of many whites. Kupperman has shown how this process unfolded in Virginia after the Indian defeat in the 1640s: "It was the ultimate powerlessness of the Indians, not their racial inferiority, which made it possible to see them as people without rights." Natives who had been "ingenious," "industrious," and "quick of apprehension" in 1610 now became "sloathfull and idle, vitious, melancholy, [and] slovenly." This is another example of the process of cognitive dissonance.”
James W. Loewen, Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong

Stieg Larsson
“What irritated her most was that they kept brushing off her arguments with patronizing smiles, making her feel like a teenager being quizzed on her homework. Without actually uttering a single inappropriate word, they displayed towards her an attitude that was so antediluvian it was almost comical. You shouldn't worry your pretty head over complex matters, little girl.”
Stieg Larsson, The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest

year in books
Everett...
113 books | 12 friends

Berna L...
248 books | 31 friends

Otis Wa...
168 books | 52 friends

Daniell...
112 books | 3 friends


The Devil in the White City by Erik LarsonThe Scarecrow by Michael    ConnellyThe Regulators by Richard  BachmanFlirt by Laurell K. HamiltonPlaying for Pizza by John Grisham
2025 Reading Challenge
2,887 books — 1,988 voters


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