I do not think that there can ever be enough books about anything and I say that knowing that some of them are going to be about Pilates.The more knowledge the better seems like a solid rule of thumb, even though I have watched enough science fiction films to accept that humanity’s unchecked pursuit of learning will end with robots taking over the world.-Sarah Vowell

Monday, March 30, 2020

Miss Peregrine's Home For Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs


This book reminded me of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone in that I felt like putting it down even though people had told me that this was a very good book and yet the beginning is slow and plodding and very boring.  Sixteen-year-old Jacob is close to his grandfather whom he grew up hearing stories about this island off the coast of Wales where he had spent the War years (World War II) at on orphanage. As a Jew, he had lost his family to the Nazis but he found a home at the orphanage where the children there had peculiar abilities. Olive could float into the air.  Brownyn could lift heavy boulders.  Fiona could grow blossoms.  But he becomes worried that he's going to be attacked and when he is Jacob sees the monster that attacks him and hears his grandfather's last words to him which are that it's not safe for him here. That he needs to go to the island and the date Septemeber 3, 1940. 

Then comes the boring parts with the police interviews and the trips to the psychiatrist because he's having nightmares about the monster.  That takes like one hundred pages but it also includes him and his dad getting to the island and him exploring it which is pretty boring too.  I mean this book has peculiar children in the title and you don't meet any until page 131 and that's Emma who can control fire and who was his grandfather\s girlfriend.  But she thinks that he is a wight, an evil creature that protects the monsters.  She takes him with Milliard's, the invisible boy's help, to see Miss Peregrine who can turn into a falcon and manipulate time.  She has them on a time loop of one day playing over and over. Yes, September 3, 1940, the night the orphanage blows up from a Nazi bomb.  Miss Peregrine knows exactly who he is and informs Emma.  He tells Miss Peregrine of his grandfather's death.

He and Emma become fast friends and he tells Emma that he doesn't have any talents like she and the others do.   But does he?  The Wights are after the birds that can manipulate time and have created time loops for their charges. It's only a matter of time before they come for Miss Peregrine.  And Jacob might have to make a decision to stay with the children in the time loop and loose contact with his family.

I have to say I'm glad I decided to stay with the book through the dull and plodding parts because the rest of the book was truly worthwhile.  I plan on continuing the series and reading the next book to see where it goes.  Jacob is in a unique position of falling for his grandfather's girlfriend, a girl who is still hung up on him and sees him as a substitute.  Then there's the mysterious Miss Peregrine who gives nothing away.  This was a very good book with lots of lively characters you come to care about a great deal.  I give this book four out of five stars.

Quotes

But they worried that I spent too much time alone, clinging to the notion that socializing was therapeutic.  So was electroshock, I reminded them.
-Ransom Riggs (Miss Peregrine’s Home For Peculiar Children p 52)

I did love her, of course, but mostly just because loving your mom is mandatory, not because she was someone I think I’d like very much if I met her walking down the street.  Which she wouldn’t be, anyway; walking is for poor people.
-Ransom Riggs (Miss Peregrine’s Home For Peculiar Children p 63)

“I didn’t know you could fry toast,” I remarked, to which Kev replied that there wasn’t a food he was aware of that couldn’t be improved by frying.
-Ransom Riggs (Miss Peregrine’s Home For Peculiar Children p 72)

Trees burst forth from broken windows and skins of scabrous vine gnawed at the wals like antibodies attacking a virus—as if nature itself had waged war against it—but the house seemed unkillable, resolutely upright despite the wrongness of its angles and the jagged teeth of sky visible through sections of collapsed roof.
-Ransom Riggs (Miss Peregrine’s Home For Peculiar Children p 79)

I thought of putting my arm around her, but something stopped me. Here was this beautiful, funny, fascinating girl, who, miracle of miracles, really seemed to like me. But now I understood that it wasn’t me she liked.  She was heartbroken for someone else, and I was merely a stand-in for my grandfather. That’s enough to give anyone pause, I don’t care how horny you are.  I know guys who are grossed-out by the idea of dating a friend’s ex. By that standard, dating your grandfather’s ex would practically be incest.
-Ransom Riggs (Miss Peregrine’s Home For Peculiar Children p 230)

I must apologize. It seems I’ve gone and gotten myself shot.
-Ransom Riggs (Miss Peregrine’s Home For Peculiar Children p 312)

If all the suns but ours collapsed tonight, how many lifetimes would it take us to realize that we were alone I has always known the sky was full of mysteries—but not until now has I realized how full of them the earth was.
-Ransom Riggs (Miss Peregrine’s Home For Peculiar Children p 338)
Listed On Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Miss-Peregrines-Home-Peculiar-Children/dp/1594744769/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1585510985&sr=1-2
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        




Friday, March 27, 2020

Rat Queens Vol 5: The Colossal Magic Nothing by Kurtis J. Wiebe (Writer), Owen Gieni (Artist, Colorist), Ryan Ferrier (Letterer)


In the previous comic, the Rat Queens go adventuring when they run into Vi's twin brother and his group of fellows he calls the Cat Kings which include an old mage, a fungus druid, and a walking mushroom.  He intends to follow her and help her out whether she needs it or not and hopefully knock some sense into her and get her to come home.  When they go up against a dragon, the Rat Queens take it down in hilarious fashion while her brother stabs it in the eye once it's down.  They meet The Chorus, a group of four creatures who hunt down religious cults but don't seem to do anything about them.  They were headed toward Palisades to look into the Squid problem.   The next day the Rat Queens and The Cat Kings head out and do something they vow never to do again: Loot a temple.  Vi is a bit heartsick because Dave is under the Squid cult's spell and Hannah is embarrassed about her father staying with them and the things he does.  Braga the Orc is looking for a new group to hang with and joins the Rat Queens.

Dave has told no one his secret: that he has a son. That when his dad joined the tree as was the custom, a baby was born in the river that was his to raise for twenty years until it became his turn to join the tree.  But when he joined the cult he misplaced the baby.  He finally tells Vi and she agrees to get the Rat Queens to help him.

But first, the Queens must save Betty's friend Jason from a psychedelic toad that he has gotten trapped in. And things have gotten weird Betty has noticed. People are being erased but only Betty seems to remember them.  Then whoever is behind this goes after the Rat Queens to erase them and in the process does some seriously potentially bad damage to the world. 

This comic was really good with a real twist at the end that you never see coming as to who is behind it.  It's interesting to see what each Rat Queen regrets and the life they think they should have led instead of the one they currently are leading.  It has an interesting ending.  Kudos to Giehi for the artwork which is amazing and the cover art for one of the issues is done by Fiona Staples who does the Saga comics.  This was a great comic and I give it five out of five stars. 

Listed on Amazon:   https://www.amazon.com/Rat-Queens-Colossal-Magic-Nothing/dp/1534306773/ref=sr_1_1?crid=145RZQUP99MNX&keywords=rat+queens+vol+5&qid=1585330242&s=books&sprefix=rat+queens+vol+5%2Cstripbooks%2C185&sr=1-1


Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Saga Vol. 4 by Brian K. Vaughan (Writer), Fiona Saples (Artist), Fonografiks (Lettering and Design)


In the previous comic, Alana, Marcus, Izabel, the spirit, Marcus's mother, Klara, and baby Hazel land on Quietus where D. Oswald Heist the author lives and find a broken-down drunk who isn't all that interested in seeing them at first until he realizes that they really got his work.  Quietus is anti-Wreath and he quickly gets them inside his lighthouse home.  Heist and Klara bond over being on different sides of a battle and losing loved ones. The Will is seeing his dead ex-girlfriend Stalk who is telling him to stay on the planet and convince the others to stay as well. The four are waiting on people from Wreath to come and fix the ship, but until then they are stuck on this weird planet. The Will hits on Gwendolyn and gets slapped down on the ground.  Other odd things begin to happen.  Meanwhile, two reporters are looking into the story of Alana and Marco and the official version of her being kidnapped by him that isn't holding up to them the tabloids.  But it will prove to be pretty dangerous to go forward with this story.  Prince IV is heading toward Quietus and worried about his pregnant wife.  Prince IV doesn't get them on Quietus and the author dies trying to save them.  The Will also dies sortof by protecting Gwendyln and the girl.

This book opens up with Prince IV's wife giving birth to a son with no idea where he is.  After the debacle on Quietus, he went and found a hovel of a bar to go and drink himself silly forgetting his wife completely.  Meanwhile, Alana got a job on the Circuit acting for those across the Universe while Marko stays home and watches the child along with his mother and the ghost.  He signs her up for private dancing lessons with a woman who hits on Marko who wears a disguise when he leaves the tree.  And Alana starts taking drugs to deal with the rotten job she has and is still high when she comes home to take care of the child.

Someone is asking after The Will and Prince IV finds out about his son and seems to snap out of whatever fugue state he's been in.  Someone is coming after Alana and Marko. They are never safe.  This book shows how the stress of being on the run is affecting the couple with both of them wanting to escape, Alana to drugs and Marko to the arms of another woman. Neither feels as though the other understands what the other is having to do and sacrifice for the endeavor.  The next book should be interesting as they find out if it's worth it.   I give this book five out of five stars.

   
Listed On Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/Saga-Vol-4-Brian-Vaughan-ebook/dp/B015YX9I5U/ref=sr_1_1?crid=1Z1CPFXP7B9Q9&keywords=saga+vol+4&qid=1585140616&s=books&sprefix=saga+vol+%2Cstripbooks%2C174&sr=1-1

Monday, March 23, 2020

The Outsider by Stephen King


The police, in Flint City, Oklahoma, led by Detective Ralph Anderson believe they have found their man for a truly heinous crime.  Young Frank Peterson was found with chunks bitten off of him, a tree limb shoved up his rectum, and semen on the backs of his legs.  The fingerprints all over the branch belong to one man.  An eyewitness has him picking the Frank up in a white van that has his fingerprints all over it which he dropped off in front of witnesses and picked up a stolen car that he dropped off in a hidden place with the bloody clothes and his fingerprints on the car.  Witnesses placed him that night at Gentlemen, Please, an adult men's club where he went to call for a taxi and found one right out front.  He was seen by the bouncer Charles Bolton.

The police had not brought him in for questioning. They were so sure in their case and Ralph wanted to make this a public spectacle because the accused was the local Little League Coach and he had coached his son and it was personal for Anderson so they arrested Terry Mailand in front of 1,500 people including his wife and two daughters at the big game that would determine whether the team would go to the playoffs.  Terry called his lawyer, Howie Gold who called his detective Alec to do some legwork for him.  It turns out that Terry had an Alibi. He was in Cap-City miles away at a conference with the English Department of the High School where he is a teacher. They were there to see the author Harlan Coban who was the key-note speaker.  All of the English teachers vouche for him and he shared a room with one of them.  Alec comes back with footage from the hotel where it was held with Terry in it.  But to top it off, the local cable access channel sent someone to film the talk Mr. Coban gave and the Q &A after. The camera goes back and forth to the audience where you can clearly see Terry. The next to last question was given by Terry and the camera is a close up of him.  This is all when Frank Peterson was being killed.  However, the semen matches Terry.  However, in the newsstand at the hotel, while they were waiting for their autographs, Terry saw a book that no one ever looks at and picks it up and touches it. It contains his fingerprints.

How can Terry be in two places at once? This is Stephen King so this book has a supernatural element to it, but its premise is a curious one especially when you find that Terry was not the first victim and a previous victim was jailed and committed suicide.  His alibi was mostly his mother which wasn't much of an alibi.  You really find yourself pulling for Terry throughout the book even when the evidence mounts against him.  He's such a nice guy you can't help it.  Even though you wonder if you're being played.  Also included in this book is Holly Gibney from Mr. Mercedes's books who is a private eye, though she would deny that designation.  Holly with her past experiences is the one to figure out what is going on but she must convince a group of hard-headed men that what she is saying is the truth and not fantasy.  This was an excellent book that as of this writing is being aired on HBO as a mini-series.  This book is really worth reading and I give it five out of five stars.

Quotes
Smokers never stop, they only pause.
-Stephen King (The Outsider p 227)

Thinking that if a person did begin considering supernatural possibilities, that person
would no longer be able to think of himself as a completely sane person, and thinking
about one’s sanity was maybe not a good thing. It was like thinking about your heartbeat:
if you had to go there, you might already be in trouble.
-Stephen King (The Outsider p 242)

I’ve seen Paths of Glory at least a dozen times. It’s one of Mr. Kubrick’s finest. Much
better than The Shining and Barry Lyndon, in my opinion, but of course he was much
younger when he made it. Young artists are much more likely to be risktakers in my
opinion.
-Stephen King (The Outsider p 286)

When Holly was usure about what to do next, she almost always sought out either
an International House of Pancakes or a Denney’s. Both served breakfast all day, comfort
food that you could eat slowly without being bothered by things like wine lists and
pushy waiters.
-Stepehen King (The Outsiders p 313)

It was that phrase—I had a friend. Time had passed, and time probably did heal all
wounds, but God, some of them healed so slowly. And the difference between I have
and I had was such a gulf.
-Stephen King (The Outsider p 313)

 Like measles, mumps, or rubella, tragedy was contagious.
-Stephen King (The Outsider p 355)

Ralph turned around in his seat. “Listen to me now. No more ifs or maybes.  For
today, the outsider does exist. For today, he can read Charles Bolton’s mind any
time he wants to, and unless we know differently, he’s in the Marysville Hole. No more assumptions, just belief.  Can you do that?”  For a moment no one replied. Then Howie said, “I’m a defense lawyer, son. I can believe anything.”
-Stephen King (The Outsider p 489)

One great thing about hard drugs—everything still hurts, but you don’t give a shit.
-Stephen King (The Outsider p 537)

Dreams are the way we touch the unseen world, that’s what I believe. They are a special gift.
-Stephen King (The Outsider p 549)

|”I’m a very curious person. Sometimes that gets me in trouble.” “And sometimes it gets you out.”
-Stephen King (The Outsider p 550)

If you can’t let go of the past, the mistakes you’ve made will eat you alive.
-Stephen King (The Outsider p 550)

Listed On Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/Outsider-Novel-Stephen-King/dp/1501180983/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1584959712&sr=1-1

Friday, March 20, 2020

X-Men: Domino by Todd Degazo (Writer), Ben Raab (Writer), Joe Pruett (Scripter), Craig Kyle (Writer), Christopher Yost (Writer), Adam Warren (Writer, Artist), Anthony Piper (Writer, Artist, Colorist), Daerick Gross (Artist), Brian Stelfreeze (Artist, Plotter, Colorist), Gabriele Dell Otto (Artist, Colorist), James Houston (Colorist), Joe Rosas (Colorist), Guru-eFX (Colorist), Harry Candelario (Inker), David Perrin (Penciler), Richared Starkings (Letterer), LIz Agraphiotis (Letterer), John Costanza (Letterer), VC's Clayton Cowles (Letterer), V C's Cory Petit (Letterer), and VC's Joe Caramagna (Lettterer)


She encounters the evil Pico while vacationing in Rio. Soon she has him taken care of when her old buddy from the X-Force days, Puck, has arrived with some intel about someone she once cared about--the one who got away--who is being held by Gyrich.  So she goes to infiltrate the place and fights off the robots only to find that the men stationed there are already dead and Milo, her former lover is gone, leaving behind his favorite book, Dane's Inferno, which he wouldn't do willingly.  That's when she runs into Deathstrike.  She blows up Deathstrike which is a temporary measure with her but it gives her time to go and find who is behind this and seek out Milo and try to save him.

In the next set of comics, Domino looks younger in the drawings.  Honestly, she looks like a twelve-year-old girl.  But she's working for a man named Jonathan assassinating bad guys and grabbing bad biotoxins off the market.  And he's helping her find out about her invisible mother who seems not to exist.  Only when Jonathan is killed does Domino find out that he was playing both sides--selling to the highest bidder.  She does find out something about her mother and about a mysterious weapon that could destroy a lot. So she follows the evidence where it leads her and finds some surprises along the way,

In the third one, I really enjoyed the way the artist drew this one.  It reminds me a bit of how the Jessica Jones comics are drawn with that mostly black and white filmy smudged look. But it works perfectly for this story of Wolverine and Domino who has gotten on the wrong side of the Assassins Creed and The Hand and needs help getting out of trouble whether she'll admit it or not.

The last two are very short but still very good.  All of the stories in this collection are steller and really introduce you to Domino and give you a great feel for her character and her abilities of good luck and kicking ass.  The art is good too. I enjoyed the art in the first comic story section about Domino and Milo. It was very well done.  Overall this was a fantastic book and I give it five out of five stars.

Listed On Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/X-Men-Domino-Ben-Raab/dp/1302912267/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=x-men+domino&qid=1584704344&s=books&sr=1-1


Wednesday, March 18, 2020

Star Wars Darth Vader Vol 3: The Shu-Torun War by Kieron Gillen (Writer),Leinil Yu (Artist ), Gerry Alanguilan (Inker), Jason Keith (Colorist), Salavador Larroca (Artist), Edgar Delgado (Colorist), VC's Joe Caramagna (Letterer)


In the previous comic, Vader has taken it upon himself to capture the person who blew up the Death Star since he now knows that that person is his son. It doesn't matter that someone else has been assigned to the task. He and Dr. Alpha decimate Luke's old home once they're done investigating it. Now Alpha has a new plan that involves four bounty hunters and some Empire loot.  The money comes from a Rodisian who ran illegal activities in the Outer Rim without paying the Empire it's share or asking permission.  He had quite a lot of money saved up, but Alpha doesn't plan on stealing all of it.  Alpha has come up with a brilliant plan on stealing some of it.  And Alpha is working with Vader who wanted these bounty hunters beholden to them for some reason.  But things go wrong and Dr. Alpha gets kidnapped by someone and Vader is desperate to get her back.

Meanwhile, the Emperor has a mission for Vader on Shu-Torun which hasn't been producing as much ore as it should have.  When Vader arrives he finds not the king but his youngest daughter, Princess Trios has been left in charge.  She tries to explain to Vader that the Ore Dukes is the problem.  The Empire has upped its amount needed and the Dukes are balking at how much is being asked of them to produce since it is difficult and how much they are being paid.

Vader and Queen Trios must bring the Dukes to heel and they try by destroying one of the Duke's delving citadel that was built centuries ago and will never produce again.  The Emperor didn't send Vader alone on this quest. He sent Cylo who double-crosses Vader and helps the Dukes in order to get Vader out of the way and have his place next to the Emperor.  So Vader and his Imperial Army are not there to help Queen Trios when she goes up against the Duke.  She has to somehow get the Army to listen to her and obey her and fight for her and go ahead with the plan and hope that Vader will be able to help, but if not she will fight to the death.

During this comic, Vader keeps getting reports on Dr. Alpha's whereabouts.  Vader also came to this planet with his trusted droids 000 and Beetee.  They are hilarious to read about their exploits and their thinking. It's like the evil psycho C-3PO.  Queen Trios will appear in the regular Star Wars comics and play an important role.  This book shows how she was shaped by Vader.  This was an excellent book and I give it five out of five stars.

Listed On Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/Star-Wars-Darth-Shu-Torun-2015-2016-ebook/dp/B01IO3NJVQ/ref=sr_1_fkmr1_1?keywords=star+wars+darth+vader+sho+turan+war&qid=1584534654&s=books&sr=1-1-fkmr1

Monday, March 16, 2020

Percy Jackson and the Olympians: The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan


This exciting book opens up with twelve-year-old Percy Jackson in his sixth boarding school in New York and things aren't going well.  But at least he has his best friend Grover whom he keeps the bullies away from and his favorite teacher the Latin teacher Mr. Brunner.  This is his best class. The others he's making a C- or worse in. He has dyslexia and ADHD which doesn't help.  When they go to a museum he's really enjoying it but people like Nancy Bobbfit, the class bully are ruining it by talking and acting up.  When Percy "knocks" her down by the fountain for harassing him and Grover, Mrs. Dodds the Pre-Algebra teacher takes him away to a quiet place to talk to him, but really it was to reveal herself in all her glory with her black wings and screeching voice. Mr. Brunner appears and tosses Percy a pen that when uncapped becomes a sword and he uses it to slash through Mrs. Dodds.  who turns to golden sand.  When they get back to school no one remembers a Mrs. Dodds.  And one night Percy overhears Grover talking to Mr. Brunner about him and the importance of the Summer Solstice and him not being ready in time.  And how Mrs. Dodd was a kindly one?

Now its summer and Percy has gotten kicked out of another school. He goes home to his mom and his evil stepdad who plays poker all the time and treats his mother like trash. His mother decides that the two of them should go to the beach for two weeks.  That night she tells him that his father had wanted him to go away to a summer camp, but she had been against it because it might mean she never saw him again. 

With a hurricane arrives Grover points out to Percy that he hasn't told his mother about what happened at school and how on the bus road home they saw the three fates snip a string, which is bad news for Percy.  His mom gets them in the car and they start driving toward the summer camp and they get close when a lightning bolt totals the car and stops them.  Percy refuses to leave without them so they head toward the large pine tree which is the property line and the line of safety.  A minotaur arrives to attack them and they split up to give him too many targets to attack.  He goes after Percy's mom who puts Grover who is injured and out of it on the ground. He grabs her by the throat and she turns into a shining light and disappears.  Percy battles the Minotaur and snags one of its horns off of its head and uses it to stab it in the heart turning it into a pile of gold sand. Percy grabs Grover and they make it across the border. 

Mr. Brunner, aka Chiron, shows him around. There are eleven houses (Hades doesn't get a house) and four of them are empty. Artemis because she vowed to remain pure, Hera because she is married to Zeus, and Zeus and Poisdon because the two of them and Hades vowed to have no more children a century ago because they were always fighting each other's children in battle and it was getting pretty bad.  Zeus, however, broke that promise made on the River Styx and sired a child in some twenty years ago. She almost made it to the summer camp but sacrificed herself so the others would make it.  She was turned into the large pine tree that protects the place.  Dionysis runs the camp because he pissed off Zeus twice over a nymph. He also lost his ability to drink alcohol so he stays pretty ticked off most of the time. 

Percy meets Annabeth who lives in the Athena hut and has been there the longest along with Luke who lives in Hermes.  All those who don't know who their parent is staying in Hermes which is the god of travelers so it's always crowded.  That\s where Percy goes.  He learns the things he's not so good at but sword fighting is one he's good at and canoeing is another.  He just can't seem to find the right sword to fit his hand.  He trains sword fighting with Luke and learns Greek with Annabeth.  Grover helps out when he can. 

On capture the flag day, the two teams are Ares and Athena.  Luke has a plan to capture the Ares flag and change it to Hermes colors.  Percy is asked to patrol the borders and when he does, the evil Clarisse of Ares and her gang come for some payback for Percy soaking them in toilet water when they came to beat him up when he first arrived.  But Percy's ready and he somehow manages to beat them and break Clarisse's magical pole.  Then a hellhound appeared which could only be summoned by someone on the grounds in order to get past the security.  Chiron put some arrows into it and killed it. 

This has convinced Chiron that Percy must go on his quest now rather than later and that he may take two people. He chooses Grover and Annabeth, who had put in a request for a quest a while back.  Chiron tells him that Zeus is missing his master bolt, an object of enormous power and he and Poisodon are fighting over it because he believes that Poisdon stole it in order to take over Olympus.  They have agreed to not start anything until the summer solstice when Poisodon expects an apology for besmirching his name and Zeus expects the master bolt returned to him.  Percy goes to see the Oracle who has this to say: You shall go west, and face the god who has turned./ You shall find what was stolen, and see it safely returned./ You shall be betrayed by one who calls you a friend./ And you shall fail to save what matters most, in the end.

Percy, Annabeth, and Grover will encounter a wide variety of creatures in many disguises and more than one god along the way.  The only thing that bothered me was that Annabeth and Grover were viewed as people/satyrs that needed to be rescued by Percy all the time.  I mean this was Annabeth's quest too.  I think it does a disservice to girls to see that Annabeth does one thing to save them while being a damsel in distress the rest of the time.  Otherwise, this was a great book and I really enjoyed the myths coming alive in modern times.  Percy Jackson is a worthy hero who doesn't figure out things too quickly even if you do.  Though I was surprised by some things.  Grover is a good friend to have.  I really enjoyed this book and look forward to its sequel. I give it four out of five stars.

Quotes

“Hades would very much like to kill that young half-blood before he can take up his quest”  “Great,” I muttered. “That’s two major gods who want to kill me.” “But a quest to…” Gover swallowed. “I mean, couldn’t the master bolt be iin some place like Maine? Maine’s very nmice this time of year.|”
-Rick Riordan (Percy Jackson and the Olympians: The Lightning Thief p 143-4)

I could see people being chased by hellhounds, burned at the stake, forced to run naked through cactus patches, or listen to opera music.        
-Rick Riordan (Percy Jackson and the Olympianan: The Lighning Thief p 301)
 Listed On Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/Lightning-Thief-Percy-Jackson-Olympians/dp/0786838655/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2XIU9J2QROOUN&keywords=the+lightning+thief+by+rick+riordan&qid=1584368971&s=books&sprefix=the+lightnin%2Cstripbooks%2C174&sr=1-1

Friday, March 13, 2020

Beatles Vs Stones by John McMillian


First of all the Beatles and the Rolling Stones were never at odds with each. They never had a rivalry.  The press created one in order to have sensationalism.  In fact, they were quite friendly toward each other.  The Beatles even gave them a song of theirs "A Whole Lotta Man" which was
Stone's second release and helped them work through a song they were having problems with and fix it called "We Love You" in 1967. If you listen carefully you can hear Lennon's vocals on that song.  The Beatles paved the way for the Rolling Stones.   Without them opening the door for British bands and providing something to rebel against, McMillian argues, the Stones would have broken up and gone their separate ways.  They just didn't have it in them to struggle for years like the Beatles did as a group since they didn't necessarily get along together.

The Beatles were from lower-class backgrounds in Liverpool which was looked down upon by London. It was a North Vs South battle that had been going on for forever.  When the Beatles started out playing in Hamburg, Germany, a working-class town they wore leather and cussed from the stage while eating on stage and acting like degenerates.  The Rolling Stones came from an upper class or middle-class background with the exception of Charlie Watts and Bill Wymann who were working class.  When they played their music they sat down on the ground and played in a circle quietly playing the R & B music the Beatles were screechingly playing in Hamberg.

It wasn't until Brian Epstein took control of the Beatles management that he cleaned them up and dressed them in identical suits and reformed them into good, young men that the Beatles image changed, much to their chagrin.  Andrew Oldham, a very young man who had picked up his experience managing bands by picking the brains of some of the best in the business such as Phil Spector dressed the Stones in identical suits just like all the other bands were wearing and sent them to America on a tour with other bands.  The Stones hated the suits and treated them like crap. Richards got pudding on him as well as whiskey. Soon Mick was chewing gum on stage and the band looked a mess.  Then came an interview where they only answered with "yeah" and "no", coming off as surly.  The teens loved it and Oldham saw an opportunity.  He encouraged the Stones to be even more rude and crude and he'd sell them as the anti-Beatles.  By the time the Beatles played in America on the Ed Sullivan show he made the famous remark "Would you want your daughter to date a Rolling Stone?"

McMillian does a marvelous job of exploring the lives of the Beatles and the Stones and how they intersected.  He also includes chapters on how political the Beatles and Stones really were and how they were seen to be, and how they shared a financial manager that didn't go so well.  The Beatles envied the Stone's freedom to act however they wanted and to dress however they wanted and the Stones envied the Beatle's success.  During the Sixties, the Beatles outsold the Stones massively.  This book is not for the fan who knows everything already but for those with a casual knowledge or none at all.  I found it fascinating as I only had sketchy information on the two bands' personal lives. I learned a lot.  I give it a four out of five stars.

Quotes
“The Beatles want to hold your hand,” journalist Tom Wolfe once quipped, “but the Stones want to burn down your town.”
-John McMillian (Beatles Vs Stones p 3)

May years later, though, when he had no need to belie this true feelings, he [Sean O’Mahony] summed  up the two groups this way: “The Beatles were thugs who were put across as nice blokes , and the Rollings Stones were gentlemen who were made into thugs by Andrew.”
=John McMillian (Beatles Vs Stones p 9)

Asked about “Street Fighting Man” being boycotted by Chicago radio stations, Jagger mused, “They must think a song can make a revolution. I wish it could.”
-John McMillian (Beatles Vs Stones p 184)

Listed On Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Beatles-vs-Stones-John-McMillian/dp/143915970X/ref=sr_1_1?crid=175DW3OC8R5Z3&keywords=beatles+vs+stones&qid=1584098175&s=books&sprefix=Beatles+vs+Stones%2Cstripbooks%2C941&sr=1-1
  

Monday, March 9, 2020

Different Seasons by Stephen King


Four Seasons is a book that contains four novellas, or stories that are longer than short stories but shorter than novels. They include for Spring, "Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption"; for Summer  "Apt Pupil"' for Fall, "The Body";  and for Winter, "The Breathing Method".  While King is often known for writing horror novels, this book is not a collection of horror stories it is a collection of human stories.

In "Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption" subtitled "Hope Springs Eternal" Andy Dufresne was sent to Shawshank Prison for killing his wife and her lover even though he didn't do it.  It would take Red, the man who could get you anything within reason a little while to realize that Andy was truly innocent of the crimes he had been convicted of.  This is the story of hope and of a man who tries to change things in prison by building a larger library and getting some of the men their GEDs in hopes that they will change their lives around when they leave. And all Andy had to do is be the financial wizard pet of the guards and the warden.  But when a young man comes to stay at Shawshank and has information that would help Andy's case, hope becomes a dangerous thing.  Will Andy give up the hope he has held on to all these years?  And what will become of Red who knows that one day they will let him out who believes that he is an institutionalized man who only belongs in prison and doesn't believe he can make it on the outside.  This is truly a story about how hope is the best thing there is.  Sometimes as adults we become cynical and forget about how good it is to hope. If Andy can still have hope after decades in prison than I suppose we should be able to as well.

In "Apt Pupil", subtitled "Summer of Corruption", Todd Bowden a thirteen-year-old boy was interested in the Holocaust.  Imagine his surprise when he discovers that one of the bus riders is an elderly man who looks just like the head of the Patin Concentration Camp which killed over 90,000 people.  He goes by the name Arthur Decker now but his real name was Dussander.  Todd dusted his mailbox and his door handle for prints with a professional kit and compared them to the ones the Israelis have one file for him and they had twelve points of comparison in common.  He tells Decker that he has left a letter with a friend to be opened if something happens to him and all of his evidence will go to the friend who will send it to the authorities.  What does he want? He wants to hear old stories about the camps.  Decker is an old man who no longer is that man.  He's weak and lonely and has even considered suicide on occasion.  The nightmares don't come as often as they used to. He leads a boring life.  Until now.  Todd awakens something inside of him.  The nightmares come back and so does the Nazi, but the nightmares hit Todd as well and he begins to change.  Who is corrupting who here?  While the two stop seeing each other on a regular basis as Todd grows older, both begin to travel down a violent path that there's no coming back from.

In "The Body" this is a story of the fall of innocence among four twelve-year-old boys about to enter junior high.  There's Vern who is dumb as dishwater and has an older brother who hangs out with the notorious older kid Ace Merrill.  Teddy is crazy and always doing dares. His father, a war vet, burned both his ears and wound up in the mental hospital.  Chris is the peacemaker who comes from a family of brutal alcoholics who beat on him.  He lives in a shack with no indoor plumbing.  Gordie writes stories and has parents that have forgotten he exists because their favorite son Denny died in a jeep accident and they can't move past it.  Of course, when Denny was alive they didn't pay him much attention either.  Vern hears that the boy from a few towns over that's been missing and presumed dead was found by his brother and his friend but they have boosted a car that night and therefore weren't going to tell the police about it because that would mean telling about the stolen car.  So Vern tells his friends and they decide to tell their parents that they're camping in Vern's backyard and to go and look for the body of the boy themselves and become heroes and get their names in the paper.  This is a story of their adventures getting there.  I think that the first short story that is included in there shouldn't be there.  I get that it is Gordie as an adult looking into the time of his family with Denny's death but in disguise, but it really has no place in the story. Otherwise,this is a touching story of friendship. 

In "The Breathing Method", subtitled "A Winter's Tale", there is a club of men where you can play pool, bowl, read books that are found nowhere else, or enjoy a nice drink.  But on Thursdays, it is storytelling night.  And on the Thursday before Christmas, it is the time for an uncanny story.  Mr. Adley, the narrator goes to the club and mentions a few of the stories but has one in mind he wants to tell. A Christmas story told by a doctor who said it took place in 1935 when being an unwed mother was disastrous.  Sandra Stansfield found herself in this position with the father having runoff.  She was a shop girl who was taking acting lessons in order to have a career on the stage.  But once her condition was revealed she would lose her job.  Luckily she had saved up some money and she went ahead and paid the doctor for all the visits and the hospital stay.  She buys a wedding band at a pawn shop in order to find a new place to stay when she loses her apartment. The doctor gets her to take prenatal vitamins and teaches her the breathing method which she takes to like a duck to water.  These are radical things for the time.  She says it helps her to stay calm and keep from saying or doing things when she is angry that she shouldn't.  Sandra is determined to have this baby no matter what and the circumstances of the birth will be on Christmas Eve and be a Christmas miracle to behold.

These stories are beautifully written, except for "Apt Pupil" whose material wasn't beautiful but whose story was powerful. They get to the heart of the human condition and what makes one a person in the society of days past and makes you wonder if much has changed.  Does institutionalism still occur?  Would Todd have become a skinhead today?  Would the trip have been the same if the boys had had phones with GPS?  I prefer them set in their original settings.  They seem to speak to me more there.  I really loved this book. This is my second time reading it and I give it five out of five stars.

Quotes

 You ever have a con come up to you and offer you a contract?” I nodded. It’s happened a lot of times over the years. You are, after all, the man who can get it. And they figure if you can get them batteries for their transistor radios or cartons of Luckies or lids of reefer, you can put them in touch with a guy who’ll use a knife.   “Sure you have,” Andy agreed.  “But you don’t do it.  Because guys like us, red, we know there’s a third choice. An alternative to staying simon-pure or bathing in the filth and slime. It’s the alternative that grown-ups all over the world pick. You balance off your walk through the hog-wallow against what it gains you.  You choose the lesser of two evils and try to keep your good intentions in front of you. And I guess you judge how well you’re doing by how well you sleep at night…and what your dreams are like.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption p 43-4)

But it isn’t just a piece of paper that makes a man. And it isn’t just prison that breaks one, either.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption p 72)

When you take away a man’s freedom and teach him to live in a cell, he seems to lose his ability to think in dimensions. He’s like that jackrabbit I mentioned, frozen in the oncoming lights of the truck that is bound to kill it. More often than not a con who’s just out will pull some dumb job that hasn’t a chance in hell of succeeding….and why? Because it’ll get him back inside. Back where he understands how things work.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption p 75)\

For all I know, Sam Norton is down there in Eliot now, attending services at the Baptist church every Sunday, and wondering how the hell Andy Dufresne ever could have gotten the better of him. I could have told him, the answer to the question is simplicity itself. Some have got it, Sam. And some don’t, and never will.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption p 84)

I sort of disgusted him, the way a cringing, servile old dog that crawls up to you on its belly to be petted will disgust a man. Christ, I disgusted myself. But…I couldn’t make myself stop. I wanted to tell him: That’s what a whole life in prison does for you, young man. It turns everyone in a position of authority into a master, and you into every master’s dog.  Maybe you know you’ve become a dog, even in prison. But since everyone else in gray is a dog, too, it doesn’t seem to matter much. Outside, it does.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption p 96-7)

This was in the early April of 1977, the snow just starting to melt off the fields, the air just beginning to warm, the baseball teams coming north to start a new season play in the only game I’m sure God approves of.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption p 97)

Remember that hope is a good thing, Red, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption p 100)

But there’s really no question. It always comes down to just two choices. Get busy living or get busy dying.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption p 100)

My dad thinks kids should find out about life as soon as they can—the bad as well as the good. Then they’ll be ready for it.  He says life is a tiger you have to grab by the tail, and if you don’t know the nature of the beast it will eat you up.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “Apt Pupil” p 117)

He had been lonely—no one would ever know just how lonely. There had been times when he thought almost seriously of suicide. He made a bad hermit.  The voices he heard came from the radio. The only people who visited were on the other side of a dirty glass square. He was an old man, and although he was afraid of death, he was more afraid of being an old man who is alone.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “Apt Pupil” p 145)

“|There will be water too if God wills it, and we will find it if God wills it, and we will drink if God wills it.” What happens is not up to us.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “Apt Pupil” p 205)

The most important things are the hardest to say. They are the things you are ashamed of, because words diminish them—words shrink things that seemed limitless when they were in your head to no more than living size when they’re brought out. But it’s more than that, isn’t it?  The most important things lie too close to wherever your secret heart is buried, like landmarks to a treasure your enemies would love to steal away. And you make revelations that cost you dearly only to have people look at you in a funny way, not understanding what you’ve said at all, or why you thought it was so important that you almost cried while you were saying it. That’s the worst, I think. When the secret stays locked within not for want of a teller but for want of an understanding ear. 
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “The Body” p 301)

Love may be as divine as the poets say, he thinks, but sex is Bozo the Clown bouncing around on a spring.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “The Body” p 325)

I never had any friends later on like the ones I had when I was twelve. Jesus, did you?
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “The Body” p 351)

I learned how you can pick out someone who is just learning to smoke: if you’re new at it you spit a lot.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “The Body” p 397)

The only two useful artforms are religion and stories.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “The Body” p 411)

Speech destroys the functions of love, I think—that’s a hell of a thing for a writer to say, I guess, but I believe it to be true.  If you speak to tell a deer you mean it no harm, it glides away with a single flip of its tail. The word is the harm.  Love isn’t what these asshole poets like McKuen want you to think it is. Love has teeth, they bite; the wounds never close.  No word, no combination of words, can close those lovebites.  It’s the other way around, that’s the joke. If those wounds dry up, the words die with them.  Take it from me. I’ve made my life from the words, and I know that it is so.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “The Body” p 440)

Friends come in and out of your life like busboys in a restaurant, did you ever notice that?
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “The Body” p 447)

At seventy-three hot blood isn’t even really a memory; it’s more of an academic report.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “The Breathing Method” p 456)

The heat radiated all the way across the room—surely there is no welcome for a man or woman that can equal a fire on the hearth.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “The Breathing Method” p 456-7)

Birth is wonderful, gentlemen, but I have never found it beautiful—not by any stretch of the imagination. I believe it is too brutal to be beautiful. 
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “The Breathing Method” p 481)

Homesickness is not always a vague, nostalgic, almost beautiful emotion, although that is somehow the way we always seem to picture it in our mind. It can be a terribly keen blade, not just a sickness in metaphor but in fact as well, it can change the way one looks at the world; the faces one sees in the street look not just indifferent but ugly…perhaps even malignant. Homesickness is a real sickness—the ache of the uprooted plant.
-Stephen King (Different Seasons “The Breathing Method” p 493-4)


  




Friday, March 6, 2020

Wonder Woman Vol 8: Dark Gods by James Robinson (Writer), Stephen Segobia (Artist), Jesus Merino (Artist), Marc Lamino (Artist)< Frazer Irving (Artist, Colorist) J. Calafiore (Artist), Andy Dwens (Artist}, Emanuela Lupacchino (Artist), Ray McCarthy (Artist), Rick Leonard (Artist), Romulo Fajardo Jr. (Colorist), David Baron (Colorist), Allen Passaqua (Colorist), Chris Sotomayor (Colorist), and Siada Temofonte (Letterer)


Jason has decided to be a superhero but he's off to a rocky start by bringing strangers home to party at Diana's home.  Steve doesn't trust him and Diana is practicing tough love on him because she doesn't want to see him get killed because he was careless.  Then Jason disappeared for a while and came back with a powerful new suit and no memories of how he got it but dreams of giants and that it was given with love but it comes with a price and he'll have to do something with the suit soon.  Steve and his Oddfellows get the last of the relics and lock them up in A.R.G.O.S.  Wonder Woman fights Grail and gets her under the Lasso of Truth and finds out some of Darkseid's plan.  He wants the rest of the relics and he plans to go to Themyscira to do use the women as his personal army. But Jason who has never set foot in the place can cross over and does and helps his mother and the women fight off Darkseid as Wonder Woman sends him far away with no memory of who he is.  Diana makes a wish for a return of the old gods.

Someone hears that wish. Dark gods from a faraway planet.  They land and begin to drive people mad, including some of the superheroes.  Jason finds out that the suit he wears was meant for his sister to fight in the coming battle, not for him, but it's now attached to him.  It allows him to have the powers of all the gods one at a time.  Diana has gone off to fight with the Star Sapphires up in space against one of the gods. The Star Sapphires use love to conquer their enemies which is why they asked Wonder Woman to help them as she stands for love. They manage to vanquish the god temporarily and Diana returns back to Earth to check on Jason.

Jason has been examing the other gods and has learned that the head god is King Best but doesn't know what he wants.  The other gods are Mob god who is the goddess of chaos and mob rule; a god with no name who is the god of doubt and nothing'; and savage, the god of war, but only wars for power, profit, and blood.  When the Justice League arrives Jason finally realizes what King Best wants--he wants lots of superheroes to absorb into his body to make him strong.  So Wonder Woman and Jason fight King Best and dunk him in the Atlantic Ocean as the other gods sweep the earth causing havoc. The rest of the Justice League and the military are fighting the gods around the globe.  When Jason finds out that Savage is in South America he heads there with a plan that could go wrong because when Diana runs after him she finds that he has fallen into the madness.  Will they be able to defeat these gods?

Diana feels a great deal of guilt over the destruction of the Earth and what is happening to Jason since she made the wish in the first place for the gods to return which brought these gods to their planet.  She feels it's her responsibility to get rid of them. But Jason and Steve won't let her bear that burden alone.  Jason really grows in this comic and shows that not only can he be trusted but he can be the hero you expect from Diana's brother.  These are formidable enemies and the writers are quite creative in their storytelling.  The art is gloriously vivid and realistically drawn.  This was an excellent comic and I truly loved it.  I give it five out of five stars. 

Listed On Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/Wonder-Woman-Vol-Dark-Gods/dp/1401289010/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=wonder+woman+vol+8&qid=1583505040&sr=8-1


















Monday, March 2, 2020

The Testaments by Margaret Atwood


This incredible book is a sequel to the Handmaid's Tale, a book about Ofred a Handmaid who lived in a Commander's house.  She worked at providing him and his wife with a child.  Ofred had had enough and grabbed at the opportunity to escape to Canada.  This book is told through three voices: Aunt Lydia one of the founders and very old; Agnes a ten=yesar-old child who grows up in Gilead in a Commander's house; and Daisy a fifteen-year-old who grew up in free Toronto.

Daisy\s parents Melanie and Nick get blown up after Daisy goes against their orders and goes to a rally that is televised and winds up on television.  But that's not the only thing that got them blown up.  The Pearl Girls missionaries spotted them.  They should have run sooner, but they didn't.  So Ava and Elija, their friends tell Daisy that that is not her name that she is actually baby Nicole the famous baby both sides have been contesting over for years.  A Handmaid escaped over the border with her child.  Ava wants Daisy to go into Gilead as a Pearl Girl recruit because their Source wants her too.  Could it be a trap? Yes, it could. But it's one they're willing to take.

Agnes starts out as a ten-year-old girl whose mother tells her stories of picking her our of a group of children. She will find out from the cruel girls at school that her mother was a free woman who was turned into a Handmaid, or a slut. She has to deal with the kids at school and the mercurial feelings add depending on her social standing as her father has remarried upon the death of his wife and gotten a Handmaid.  At the age of thirteen,her stepmother wants to get rod pf jer and puts her up on the marriage market.  Her stepmother has pushed her into marrying Commander Judd, who works with Aunt Lydia and goes through wives.  Agnes is despairing marrying him until Aunt Lydia intervenes and asks if she has felt a calling to become an Aunt.  She says she has and eagerly joins.

Aunt Lydia was a judge before everything went to hell.  She was single with no children and middle-aged, around 53,  when she was taken to a stadium along with other professional women who were of the same age, but separated by profession.  At night they were placed in the locker rooms, but first, two rows of women were blindfolded and brought forth to the center of the field and on the first-day men killed them. But on the following days, women killed them dressed in brown dresses.  As more people are added, some people are taken away. Eventually, Lydia is taken away to be before Commander Judd.  In today's time, Aunt Lydia is you're pretty sure the Source, but is she set them up.

This book was ten times better than Handmaid's Tale. You ger is so attached to the characters.  There's Aunt Lydia reminds me of Maggie Smith from The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie to Downtown Abbey.  And Agnes who has more strength than she realizes she has.  ANd Diasywho finds herself asking for help for the first time in her life.  This was a powerful book that concludes the story of The Handmaid's Tale one way or the other and its a helluva ending.  I really loved this book and I give it five out of five stars.

Quotes
“Life is not about hair,” I said then, only half jocularly. Which is true, but it is also true that hair is about life. It is the flame of the body’s candle, and as it dwindles the body shrinks and melts away I oncer had enough hair for a topknot, in the days of topknots, for a bun in the age of buns.  But now my hair is like out meals here at Ardua Hall: sparse and short.  The flame of my life is subsiding, more slowly than some of those around me might like, but faster than they may realize.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 31)

I regard my reflection. The inventor of the mirror did few of us any favors, we must have been happier before we knew what we looked like.
-Margret Atwood (The Testaments p 31)

Right now I still have some choice in the matter. Now whether to die, but when and how. Isn’t that freedom of a sort? Oh, and who to take down with me. I have made my list.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 32)

I was the age in which parents suddenly transform from people who know everything into people who know nothing.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p44)

Only an idiot would have believed this, so I did.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 48)

Sorry solves nothing.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 145)

  Reading was not for girls: only men were strong enough to deal with the force of it,; and the Aunts, of course, because they weren’t like us.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 156)

Wedlock: it had a dull metallic sound, like an iron door clicking shut.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 158)                                                                                                                                                                                  Where there is an emptiness, the mind will obligingly fill it up. Fear is always at hand to supply any vacancies, as is curiosity. I have had ample experience with both.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 238)

But it’s difficult to be grateful for the absence of an unknown quantity.  I’m afraid we did not fully appreciate the extent to which those of Aunt Lydia’s generation had been hardened in the fire. They had a ruthlessness about them that we lacked.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 288)

“But why did she do it?” I asked. “Did she want to die?”  “No one wants to di,” said Becka. “But some people don’t want to live in any of the ways that are allowed.”
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 293-4)

The truth was not noble, it was horrible.  This was what the Aunts meant, then, when they said women’s minds were too weak for reading. We could crumble, we would fall apart under the contradictions, we would not be able to hold firm.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 303)

I feared I might lose my faith.  If you’ve never had a faith, you will not understand what that means. You feel as if your best friends is dying; that everything that defined you is being burned away’ that you’ll be left all alone. You feel exiled, as if you are lost in a dark wood. It was like the feeling I’d had when Tabitha died; the world was emptying itself of meaning. Everything was hollow. Everything was withering.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 303)

The truth can cause a lot of trouble for those who are not supposed to know it.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 307)

Torture is like dancing. I’m too old for it. Let the younger one practice their bravery.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 404)

In my end is my beginning, as someone once said. Who was that? Mary, Queen of Scots, if history does not lie.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 404)

A bird of the air shall carry the voice, and that which hath wings shall tell the matter. Love is as strong as death.
-Margaret Atwood (The Testaments p 415)                 
     
Listed on Amazon:   https://www.amazon.com/Testaments-Novel-Margaret-Atwood/dp/0385543786/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1583159928&sr=8-1